LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. 



©|squ - @iqqg5|t If - 

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. 



I 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 

■ i .„ fa ' J 

PRACTICAL SERMONS 



BY 



MRS. CATHERINE BOOTH, 



WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY 



DANIEL STEELE, D.D. 




Boston : 

Mcdonald & gill, 

Office of The Christian Witness, 
36 Bkomfield St. 



Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1883, 

Bv Mcdonald & gilt., 

In the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington. 



PUBLISHERS' PREFACE. 



Our attention was first called to this book by Kev. Daniel 
Steele, D. D., and after a careful, and, to us, profitable read- 
ing, we yielded readily to bis persuasion to give it to the 
American Churches, being assured that its practical, burn- 
ing truths, must arouse all to a clearer apprehension of 
their duty and privilege. 

These sermons are a marvel of direct, earnest appeal to 
the hearts of all who seek to know the way of the Lord 
more perfectly. No one can read them without being pro- 
foundly stirred, and scripturally enlightened. They are 
suited to arouse the dormant energies of all classes to a 
better and more useful life. 

The Introduction, by Dr. Steele, sets forth in earnest 
words the religious character of the author, and the excel- 
lencies of these sermons. We give them to the public with 
the prayer that their perusal may kindle a flame of revival 
in all the land by stirring up the people to seek the pente- 
costal baptism, 

Mcdonald & gill. 

3 



AUTHOR'S PREFACE. 



The addresses contained in this little volume were deliv- 
ered during a series of services at the West End of London, 
in the summer of 1880. That they were used then of the 
Lord I had abundant evidence, and on that account I have 
consented to their reproduction in this form, hoping that 
He may still speak through them to many souls. 

I only regret that pressing public duties have prevented 
the shorthand writer's notes being revised as thoroughly as 
I could have wished, especially as they are reports of what 
were themselves largely unpremeditated utterances. 

Catherine Booth. 

London, December, 1880. 



INTRODUCTION". 



This volume is reprinted in America at my oft-repeated 
suggestion. When the reader has finished these sermons he 
will not ask why I have urged the publication of an Ameri- 
can edition. The sermons will have spoken for themselves. 
To induce the Christian public to read this book, a few 
words of information respecting its gifted author, her excel- 
lencies as a preacher, and the wonderful work in which she 
is engaged, will be our only argument. 

Mrs. Catherine Booth is the wife of Eev. William Booth, 
formerly a Primitive Methodist preacher, but now the 
Commander-in-Chief of the Salvation Army. Converted 
at fifteen, her piety till several years after her marriage 
was like a shaded lamp, shining only upon the narrow 
circle of the parsonage and parish. She says: "I was one 
of the most timid and bashful disciples the Lord J esus ever 
saved." For ten years the daily battle of her life was with 
the duty of giving public testimony with her lips to the 



8 INTRODUCTION. 

power of Christ to save. Her victory at iast, and her r| 
markable call to preach when the mother of four children 
under five years of age, and the spiritual power of her min- 
istry, are thrillingly detailed in the sermon on " Witnessing 
for Christ." She has been a preacher twenty-three years, 
and has brought up nine children to preach the Gospel. 

My first knowledge of Mrs. Booth was obtained in 1880, 
from a letter of a strait-laced Presbyterian doctor of divin- 
ity, published in one of the organs of that denomination in 
New York. He had listened to all the celebrities in Lon- 
don, not excepting Spurgeon and Parker, but had heard no 
speaker who had moved him so deeply as a woman preaching 
in a hall in the West End of London. The woman was Mrs. 
Booth. This confession by a minister who would have been 
subjected to ecclesiastical censure if he had introduced a 
woman into his own pulpit, so excited my interest that I 
began to inquire about this new light which had arisen upon 
England, and to wonder whether the printing press would 
not soon reflect its rays upon our western world. I could 
not wait for an American reprint, but immediately sent for 
the volumes of her sermons. Having feasted upon them 
for several months, I am constrained to invite my fellow- 
Christians in America to the banquet. The volume entitled 
u Godliness " is not on the table, but is in course of preparer 



INTB0DUCTI0N. 9 

tion.by McDonald & Gill, and will be eagerly sought for by 
all who have tasted of " Aggressive Christianity." 

One of the bishops of the Church of England has recent- 
ly issued a letter to the clergy of his diocese, urging them, 
if they would be aroused and stimulated to go out and com- 
pel the unchurched and perishing masses to come to the 
gospel feast, to study the discourses of Mrs. Booth. Here 
they would find inspiration and incentives to this long- 
neglected work. 

The relation of Mrs. Booth to the Salvation Army may 
lead some to suppose that her sermons are only frothy rant- 
ings addressed to vicious and illiterate crowds, "the un- 
washed mob" of the metropolis of England. This is a 
great mistake. While General Booth was preaching in 
Mile End, letting down the Gospel plummet to sound the 
depths of the slums in eastern London, his wife was gather- 
ing the cultured and aristocratic class in the western part of 
the city, attracting such intellects as Frances Power Cobbe, 
the admirer and correspondent of Theodore Parker. This 
Unitarian lady, whose fame as a literateur has reached all 
parts of the English-speaking world, says of Mrs. Booth's 
preaching : " The combination of fervent zeal with practical 
good sense, in her extempore discourses, must be admired 
even by those who differ most widely from her views," 



10 INTRODUCTION. 

It has been truthfully said that woman excels in insight, 
in her power of intellectual penetration, in the instantane- 
ous, intuitive discernment of truth, like that of St. John, 
and that the masculine mind is superior in the discursive, 
or dialectic faculty, in the Pauline ability to forge and weld 
together the successive links of a chain of reasoning. Mrs. 
Booth combines both these qualities. She is Pauline and 
Johannean in the cast of her mind. He will be happily 
disappointed who opens this volume expecting to find only 
what Eenan sneeringly styles — when he characterizes the 
resurrection message of Mary Magdalene — " the hallucina- 
tion of an excited woman's imagination." The reader must 
look elsewhere for the gospel of gush. In these sermons 
there is no incoherency, no rhapsody, no rhodomontade, but 
sound theology in consecutive propositions set forth in nat- 
ural and logical sequence according to the laws of thought, 
the whole delivered with Divine unction, a river of truth 
set on fire by the Holy Ghost, bearing down or burning up 
everything before it. One element of her power is her 
plain, stout, terse Saxon speech, not slang, but the language 
of the home, the shop, and the street. Her sermons are 
theology in homespun. She eschews a scholastic form of 
theology in buckram and broadcloth. 

This volume is rightly named. For two reasons the sub- 



INTRODUCTION. 



11 



ject of the first sermon may well be applied to the entire 
book. First, the preacher insists that the Gospel, when it 
enters the heart, should be aggressive till it conquers the 
last lurking foe, through the power of the Holy Spirit wholly 
sanctifying it by an instantaneous finishing stroke given to 
original sin, as taught by John Wesley. This is a cardiual 
doctrine of the Salvation Army, and the secret of its con- 
quering power. A meeting specially for the promotion of 
this experience is held weekly in every one of their barracks. 

In the second place, the Gospel is to be aggressive till it 
subdues the whole world to Jesus, its rightful King. The 
mighty faith of Mrs. Booth grasps this glorious consumma- 
tion, as within the reach of the present generation of believ- 
ers, if they yield themselves fully to the impulses of the 
Holy Spirit. She is no gloomy pessimist, bewailing the de- 
cay of Christianity and dishonoring the dispensation of the 
Paraclete by postponing the world's conversion till after 
Jesus shall descend from Heaven, and in person set up a 
visible kingdom on the earth. These sermons are a health- 
ful antidote to this paralyzing error, and a mighty stimulus 
to missionary activity. Christians are exhorted to a grand 
evangelistic assault upon whole communities, imposing the 
Gospel upon them. "While I am writing, detachments of 
the Salvation Army are attacking all the principal towns in 



12 INTRODUCTION, 

England and Scotland, and columns are marching on France^ 
Sweden, Switzerland, North America, South Africa, and In- 
dia. They exemplify their own doctrines respecting the 
two-fold aggressive power of Christianity. They have lifted 
it out of its century-worn ruts, put a steam-engine behind it, 
and set it running everywhere at will, like a pioneer's wagon 
on a wild prairie. God speed the new Gospel chariot, till it 
bears King Jesus round the world ! 

Long have we mourned over the religious apathy which 
deadens the zeal of American Christianity. On all her 
church doors have I, in thought, seen this advertisement : — 

WANTED ! 

KELIGIOUS ENTHUSIASM. 

Inquire within. 

This book comes knocking at these church doors with ability 
to answer this universal call. If Christians would read it 
and become imbued with the spirit of its consecrated author, 
there would be an uprising of a slumbering host and a spir- 
itual Waterloo would ensue, " putting to flight the armies of 
the aliens." 

An English essayist has well said : " A great evil, to which 
human beings are by their make subject, is, that they can- 



IKTEODUCTION. 13 

talk of things, know things, and understand things, without 
feeling them in their true importance — without, in short, 
realizing them. There appears to be a certain numbness 
about the mental organs of perception ; and the man who 
is able to put things so strikingly, clearly, pithily, forcibly, 
glaringly, whether these things are religious, social, or politi- 
cal truths, as to get through that numbness, that crust of 
insensibility, to the quick of the mind and heart, must be a 
great man, an earnest man, an honest man, a good man. I 
believe that any great reformer will find less practical dis- 
couragement in the opposition of bad people, than in the 
inertia of good people." At just this point lies the obstacle 
to the advance of the Gospel. All forcible opposition has 
ceased, but a greater peril threatens us — "the inertia of 
good people." The sermons which I am now introducing 
to the good people of America have this desirable quality, 
they pierce religious numbness to the quick, and make the 
mind realize Gospel truth. May this realization inspire 
intense activity in plucking lost men as brands from the 
eternal burnings ! 

I have often endeavored in imagination to transport my- 
self to the first Christian century, when Christianity in the 
zeal of her Pentecostal baptism, was going forth as an army 
unincumbered with a baggage train and a host of non-com- 



14 INTRODUCTION. 

batants, to conquer the world. I have always failed to 
produce the scene. The sermons of this eloquent woman 
now come to my help. They show me what Christianity is 
when stripped of a cumbersome ceremonialism, a deadening 
formalism, a crushing ecclesiasticism, cut loose from the bag- 
gage train of church debts engineered by rich and worldly 
men, and relieved of a host of nominal Christians impeding 
her march, pleased only with dress parades, and raising a 
panic whenever the sham fight for a moment becomes real. 
I now see as with anointed vision that a regenerated Chris- 
tianity would speedily conquer the world. John Goodwin, 
more than two centuries ago, saw the need of a doctrinal re- 
generation of Christianity, clearing it from the errors of 
Calvinism. He wrote his " Eedemption Redeemed, wherein 
the most glorious Work of Eedemption of the World by 
Jesus Christ is vindicated by the Encroachments of latter 
Times." A similar work has Mrs. Booth wrought in her 
sermons, in her Eedemption of the Gospel from its bondage 
to enfeebling proprieties and churchly fashions and unspirit- 
ual and worldly tastes and maxims. She has demonstrated 
that the simple Gospel, preached in faith in the streets of 
London, without the sanction ©f ecclesiastical or civil au- 
thority, without wealth, without learning and the patronage 
of the upper classes, is just as powerful as it was when it 



INTRODUCTION. 15 

stood up alone in the streets of J erusalem, leaning only on 
the arm of a Jewish fisherman, stammering with a Galilean 
brogue. 

DANIEL STEELE. 

Peabody, March 1, 1883. 



CONTENTS. 



SERMON I. 
AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 

SERMON II. 
A PURE GOSPEL. 

SERMON III. 
ADAPT A TION OF ME A S URES. 

SERMON IV. 
ASSURANCE OF SALVATION. 

SERMON V. 

HOW CHRIST TRANSCENDS THE LAW. 
SERMON VI. 

THE FRUITS OF UNION WITH CHRIST. 

SERMON VII. 
WITNESSING FOR CHRIST. 

SERMON VIII. 
FILLED WITH THE SPIRIT. 

17 



CONTEXTS. 
SERMON IX. 
THE WORLD'S NEED. 

SERMON X. 
THE HOLY GHOST, 



SERMON I. 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 

Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature. — Mark 
xvi. 15. 

And I said, Who art thou, Lord? And He said, I am Jesus whom thou perse- 
cutest. But rise, and stand upon thy feet : for I have appeared unto thee 
for this purpose, to make thee a minister and a witness both of these things 
which thou hast seen, and of those things in the which I will appear unto 
thee : Delivering thee from the people, and from the Gentiles, unto whom 
now I send thee, to open their eyes, and to turn them from darkness to 
light, and from the power of Satan unto God, that they may receive for- 
giveness of sins, and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith 
that is in me. —Acts xxvi. 15-18. 

Suppose we could blot out from our minds all knowledge 
of the history of Christianity from the time of this Inaugu- 
ration Service — from that Pentecostal Baptism — or, at any 
rate, from the close of the period described in the Acts of 
the Apostles ; suppose we could detach from our minds all 
knowledge of the history of Christianity since then, and 
take the Acts of the Apostles and sit down and calculate 
what was likely to happen in the world, what different re- 
sults we should have anticipated, what a different world We 
should have reckoned upon as the outcome of it alL A 
system which commenced under such auspices, with Stich 
assumptions and professions on the part of its Author (speak- 
ing after the manner of men), and producing, as it did, in 
the first century of its existence, such gigantic and moment- 
ous results. We should have said, if we knew nothing of 
what has intervened from that time to this, that, no doubt, 
the world where that war commenced, and for which it was 
organized, would have long since been subjugated to the in- 

19 



20 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



fluence of that system, and brought under the power of its 
great Originator and Founder ! I say, from reading these 
Acts, and from observing the spirit which animated the early 
disciples, and from the way in which everything fell before 
them, we should have anticipated that ten thousand times 
greater results would have followed, and, in my judgment, 
this anticipation would have been perfectly rational and 
just. 

We Christians profess to possess in the Gospel of Christ 
a mighty lever which, rightly and universally applied, would 
lift the entire burden of sin and misery from the shoulders, 
that is, from the souls, of our fellow-men — a panacea, we 
believe it to be, for all the moral and spiritual woes of hu- 
manity, and in curing their spiritual plagues we should go 
far to cure their physical plagues also. We all profess to 
believe this. Christians have professed to believe this for 
generations gone by, ever since the time of which we have 
been reading, and yet, look at the world, look at so-called 
Christian England and America, in this end of the nineteenth 
century ! The great majority of the nations utterly ignor- 
ing God, and not even making any pretence of remembering 
Him one day in a week. And then, look at the rest of the 
world. I have frequently got so depressed with this view 
of things that I have felt as if my heart would break. I 
don't know how other Christians feel, but I can truly say 
that u rivers of water do often run down my eyes because 
men keep not His law," and because it seems to me that this 
dispensation, compared with what God intended it to be, has 
been, and still is, as great a failure as that which preceded 

it. l lt , , ' I 77.*'* - 

Nbw^l ask, how is this ? I do not for a moment believe 
that this is in accordance with the purpose of God. Some 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY.- 



21 



people have a very convenient way of hiding behind God's 
purposes, and saying, "Oh! He will do His own will." I 
wish He did ! They say, "You know God's will is done after 
all." I wish it were ! He says it is not done, and over and 
over again laments the fact that it is not done. He wants 
it to be done, but it is not done ! " It is of no use to stand 
up and propound theories that are at variance with things 
as they are." There has been a great deal too much of this, 
and it has had a very bad effect. The world is in this con- 
dition, and here is a system launched under such auspices, 
with such purposes, with such promises, and with such pros- 
pects, and yet nearly nineteen hundred years have rolled 
away and here we are. How little has been done, com- 
paratively. What a little alteration has been effected in 
the habits and dispositions of the race. 

But some of you will say, " Well, but there is a good deal 
done." Thank God for that. It would be sad if there were 
nothing done ; but it looks like a drop in the ocean compared 
with what should have been done. Now I cannot accept 
any theory which so far reflects upon the love and goodness 
of God as to make Him to blame for this eff eteness of Chris- 
tianity, and, so far as my influence extends, I will not allow 
the responsibility and the blame of all this to be rolled back 
upon God, who so loved the world that He gave His only 
Son to ignominy and death in order to redeem it. I do not 
believe it for a moment. I believe that the old arch-enemy 
has done in this dispensation what he did in former ones — 
so far circumvented the purposes of God, that he has suc- 
ceeded in bringing about this state of things — in retarding 
the accomplishment of God's purposes and keeping the 
world thus Largely under his own power and influence, and 
I believe he has succeeded in doing this, as he has succeeded 



22 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



always before, by deceiving god's own people. He has 
always done so. He has always got up a caricature of God's 
real thing, and the nearer he can get it to be like the original 
the more successful he is. He has succeeded in deceiving 
God's people: — 
First: — As to the standard of their own religious 

LIFE. 

And, Secondly, he has succeeded in deceiving them as to 

THEIR DUTIES AND OBLIGATIONS TO THE WORLD. 

He has succeeded, first, in deceiving them as to the stand- 
ard of their own religious life. He has got the Church, 
nearly as a whole, to receive what I call an "Oh, wretched 
man that I am" religion ! He has got them to lower the 
Standard which Jesus Christ Himself established in this 
Bo@k — a standard, not only to be aimed at, but to be attained 
unto — a standard of victory over sin, the world, the flesh, 
and the devil, real, living, reigning, triumphing Christianity I 
Satan knew what was the secret of the great success of those 
early disciples. It was their whole-hearted devotion, their 
absorbing love to Christ, their utter abnegation of the world. 
It was their entire absorption in the salvation of their fellow- 
men and. the glory of their God. It was an enthusiastic 
religion that swallowed them up, and made them willing to 
become wanderers and vagabonds on the face of the earth — • 
for His sake to dwell in dens and caves, to be torn asunder, 
and to be persecuted in every form. 

It was this degree of devotion, before which Satan saw 
he had no chance. Such people as these, he knew, must 
ultimately subdue the world. It is not in human nature to 
stand before that kind of spirit, that amount of love and 
zeal, and if Christians had only gone on as they began long 
since, the glorious prophecy would have been fulfilled, The 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



23 



kingdoms of this world would have become the kingdoms 
of our lord and of his Christ. 

Therefore, the arch-enemy said, "What must I do? I 
shall be defeated after all. I shall lose my supremacy as 
the god of this world. What shall I do ? No use to bring 
in a gigantic system of error, which everybody will see to 
be error." Oh, dear, no ! That has never been Satan's way ; 
but his plan has been to get hold of a good man here and 
there, who shall creep in, as the Apostle said, unawares, and 
preach another doctrine, and who shall deceive, if it were 
possible, the very elect. And he did it. He accomplished 
his design. He gradually lowered the standard of Christian 
life and character, and though, in every revival, God has 
raised it again to a certain extent, we have never got back 
thoroughly to the simplicity, purity, and devotion set before 
us in these Acts of the Apostles and in the Epistles. And 
just in the degree that it has approximated thereto, in every 
age, Satan has got somebody to oppose and to show that this 
was too high a standard for human nature, altogether beyond 
us, and that, therefore, Christians must sit down and just 
be content to be " Oh ! wretched man that I am " people to 
the end of their days. He has got the Church into a con- 
dition that makes one sometimes positively ashamed to hear 
professing Christians talk, and ashamed, also, that the world 
should hear them talk. I do not wonder at thoughtful, intelli- 
gent men being driven from such Christianity as this. It 
would have driven me off, if I had not known the power of 
godliness. I believe this kind of Christianity has made 
more infidels than all the infidel books ever written. 

Yes, Satan knew that he must get Christians down from 
the high pinnacle of whole-hearted consecration to God. He 
knew that he had no chance till he tempted them down from 



24 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



that blessed vantage ground, and so he began to spread those 
false doctrines, to counteract which John wrote his epistles, 
for, before he died, he saw what was coming, and sounded 
down the ages : — " Little children, let no man deceive you : 
he that doeth righteousness is righteous, even as he is 
righteous. He that committeth sin is of the devil ; for the 
devil sinneth from the beginning. For this purpose the Son 
of God was manifested, that he might destroy the works of 
the devil." The Lord revive that doctrine ! Help us afresh 
to put up the standard ! 

Oh ! the great evil is that dishonest-hearted people, because 
they feel it condemns them, lower the standard to their mis- 
erable experience. I said, when I was young, and I repeat 
it in my maturer years, that if it sent me to hell I would 
never pull it down. Oh ! that God's people felt like that. 
There is the glorious standard put before us. The power is 
proffered, the conditioDS laid down, and we can all attain it 
if we will ; but if we will not — for the sake of the children, 
and for generations yet unborn, do not let us drag it down, 
and try to make it meet our little, paltry, circumscribed ex- 
perience. LET US KEEP IT UP. This is the way to get 
the world to look at it. Show the world a real, living, self- 
sacrificing, hard-working, toiling, triumphing religion, and 
the world will be influenced by it ; but anything short of 
that they will turn round and spit upon ! 

Secondly : — Satan has deceived even those whom he could 
not succeed in getting to lower the standard of their own 
lives with respect to their duties and obligations to the 
world. 

I have been reading of late the Kew Testament with 
special reference to the aggressive spirit of Primitive Chris- 
tianity, and it is wonderful what floods of light come upon 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



25 



you when you read the Bible with, reference to any particular 
topic on which you are seeking for help. When God sees 
you are panting after the light, in order that you may use 
It, He pours it in upon you. It is an indispensable condition 
of receiving light that you are willing to follow it. People 
say they don't see this and that, no, because they do not 
wish to see. They are not willing to walk in it, and, there- 
fore, they do not get it ; but those who are willing to obey 
shall have all the light they want. 

It seems to me that we are come infinitely short of any 
right and rational idea of the aggressive spirit of the New 
Testament saints. Satan has got Christians to accept what 
I may call a namby-pamby, kid-glove kind of system of pre- 
senting the gospel to people. " Will they be so kind as to 
read this tract or book, or would they not like to hear this 
popular and eloquent preacher ? They will be pleased with 
him quite apart from religion. 5 ' That is the sort of half- 
frightened, timid way of putting the truth before unconverted 
people, and of talking to them about the salvation of their 
souls. It seems to me this is utterly antagonistic and re- 
pugnant to the spirit of the early saints : " Go ye and preach 
the gospel to EVEEY CKEATUBE;" and again the same 
idea — "Unto whom now I send thee." Look what is 
implied in these commissions. It seems to me that no 
people have ever yet fathomed the meaning of these two 
Divine commissions. I believe the Salvation Army havo 
come nearer to it than any people that have ever preceded 
them. Look at them. Would it ever occur to you that 
the language meant, "Go and build chapels and chinches 
and invite the people to come in, and if they will not, *et 
them alone." "GO YE." If you se^L your servant to do 
something for you, and sail, " Go and accomplish that piece 



26 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



of business for me/' you know what it would involve. 
You know that lie must see certain persons, running about 
the city to certain offices and banks, and agents, involving a 
great deal of trouble and sacrifice ; but you have nothing to 
do with that. He is your servant. He is employed by you 
to do that business, and you simply commission him to " Go 
and do it." What would you think if he went and took 
an office and sent out a number of circulars inviting your 
customers or clients to come and wait on his pleasure, and 
when they chose to come, just to put your business before 
them ? No, you would say, " Ridiculous." Divesting our 
minds of all conventionalities and traditionalisms, what 
would the language mean? "Go ye!" "To whom?" 
"To every creature." "Where am I to get at them?" 
WHERE THEY AEE. "Every creature." There is the 
extent of your commission. Seek them out ; run after them, 
wherever you can get at them. "Every creature" — 
wherever you find a creature that has a soul — there go and 
preach my Gospel to him. If I understand it, that is the 
meaning and the spirit of the commission. 

And then again, to Paul, he says, " Unto whom now I 
send thee, to open their eyes, and to turn them from dark- 
ness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God." 
They are asleep — go and wake them up. They do not see 
their danger. If they did, there would be no necessity for 
you to run after them. They axe preoccupied. Open their 
eyes, and turn them round by your desperate earnestness 
and moral suasion and moral force ; and, oh ! what a great 
deal one man can do for another, it makes me tremble to 
think ! " Turn them from darkness to light, and from the 
power of Satan unto God. How did Paul understand it ? 
He says, "We persuade men." Do not rest content with 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



27 



just putting it before them, giving them gentle invitations, 
and then leaving them alone. He ran after them, poor 
things, and pulled them out of the fire. Take the bandage 
off their eyes which Satan has bound round them ; knock 
and hammer and burn in, with the fire of the Holy Ghost, 
your words into their poor, hardened, darkened hearts, until 
they begin to realise that they are in danger ; that there 
is something amiss. Go after them. If I understand it, 
that is the spirit of the Apostles and of the early Christians ; 
for we read that when they were scattered by persecution, 
they " went everywhere, preaching the Word." The laity, 
the new converts, the young babes in Christ. It does not 
mean always in set discourses, and public assemblies, but 
they went after men and women, like ancient Israel — 
" Every man after his man," to try and win him for Christ. 

Some people seem to think that the Apostles laid the 
foundations of all the churches. They are quite mistaken. 
Churches sprang up where the Apostles had never been. 
The Apostles went to visit and organise them after they had 
sprung up, as the result of the work of the early laymen 
and women going everywhere and preaching the Word. 
Oh ! may the Lord shower upon us in this day the same 
spirit ! We should build churches and chapels ; we should 
invite the people to them ; but do you think it is consistent 
with these two commissions, and with many others, that we 
should rest in this, when three parts of the population ut- 
terly ignore our invitations and take no notice whatever of 
our buildings and of our services ? They will not come to 
us. That is an established fact. What is to be done ? 
They have souls. You profess to believe that as much as I 
do, and that they must live for ever. Where are they going ? 
What is to be done ? Jesus Christ says, " Go after them." 



28 



AGGKESSIYE CHRISTIANITY. 



When all the civil methods have failed ; when the genteel 
invitations have failed ; when one man says that he has 
married a wife, and another that he has bought a yoke of 
oxen, and another that he has bought a piece of land — then 
does the Master of the feast say, " The ungrateful wretches, 
let them alone ! 99 u No/' He says, " Go out into the high- 
ways and hedges, and compel them to come in, that my 
house may be tilled. I will have guests, and if you can't 
get them in by civil measures, use military measures. Go 
and compel them to come in." It seems to me that we 
want more of this determined, aggressive spirit. Those of 
you who are right with God — you want more of this 
spirit to thrust the truth npon the attention of your fellow- 
men. 

People say, you must be very careful, very judicious. 
You must not thrust religion down people's throats. Then, 
I say, you will never get it down. "What ! am I to wait till 
an unconverted, Godless man ivants to be saved before I try 
to save him ? He will never want to be saved till the death- 
rattle is in his throat. What ! am I to let my unconverted 
friends and acquaintances drift down quietly to damnation, 
and never tell them about their souls, until they say, "If 
you please, I want you to preach to me ! 99 Is this anything 
like the spirit of early Christianity ? No. Yerily we must 
make them look — tear the bandages off, open their eyes, 
make them bear it, and if they run away from you in one 
place, meet them in another, and let them have no peace 
until they submit to God and get their souls saved. This is 
what Christianity ought to be doing in this land, and there 
are plenty of Christians to do it. Why, we might give the 
world such a time of it that they would get saved in very 
self defence, if we were only up and doing, and determined 



AGGBESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



29 



that they should have no peace in their sins. Where is our 
zeal for the Lord ? We talk of Old Testament saints, but 
I would we were all like David. "Kivers of water ran 
down his eyes because men kept not the Law of his God." 
But you say, "We cannot all hold services." Perhaps not. 
Go as you like. Go as quietly and softly as the morning 
dew. Have meetings like the Friends, if you like. ONLY 
DO IT. Don't let your relatives, and friends, and acquaint- 
ances die, and their blood be found on your skirts ! ! ! 

I shall never forget the agony depicted on the face of a 
young lady who once came to see me. My heart went out 
to her in pity. She told me her story. She said, " I had a 
proud, ungodly father, and the Lord converted me three 
years before his death, and, from the very day of my con- 
version, I felt I ought to talk to him, and plead, and pray 
with him about his soul, but I could not muster up courage. 
I kept intending to do it, and intending to do it, until he 
was taken ill. It was a sudden and serious illness. He lost 
his mind, and died unsaved," and she said, " I have never 
smiled since, and I think I never shall any more." Don't 
be like that. Do it quietly, if you like ; privately, if you 
like ; but do it, and do it as if you felt the value of their 
souls, and as if you intended to save them, if by any pos- 
sible means in your power it could be done. 

I had been speaking in a town, in the West of England, 
on the subject of responsibility of Christians for the salvation 
of souls. The gentleman with whom I was staying had 
winced a bit under the truth, and instead of taking it to 
heart in love, and making it the means of drawing him 
nearer to God, and enabling him to serve Him better, he 
said, "I thought you were rather hard on us this morning." 
I said, " Did you ? I should be very sorry to be harder on 



30 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



anybody than the Lord Jesus Christ would be." He said, 
u You can push things to extremes, you know. You were 
talking about seeking souls, and making sacrifices. Now, 
you are aware that we build the chapels and churches, and 
pay the ministers, and if the people won't be saved, we can't 
help it." (I think he had given pretty largely to a chapel 
in the town.) I said, " It is very heartless and ungrateful of 
the people, I grant ; but, my dear sir, you would not reason 
thus in any temporal matter. Suppose a plague were to 
break out in London, and suppose that the Board of Health 
were to meet and appropriate all the hospitals and public 
buildings they could get to the treatment of those diseased, 
and suppose they were to issue proclamations to say that 
whoever would come to these buildings should be treated 
free of cost, and every care and kindness bestowed on them, 
and, moreover, that the treatment would certainly cure 
them ; but, supposing the people were so blind to their own 
interests, so indifferent and besotted that they refused to 
come, and, consequently, the plague was increasing and 
thousands dying, what would you in the provinces say? 
Would you say, 'Well, the Board of Health have done 
what they could, and if the people will not go to be healed, 
they deserve to perish ; let them alone ! ' No, you would 
say, 6 It is certainly very foolish and wicked of the people, 
but these men are in a superior position. They understand 
the matter. They know and are responsible for the conse- 
quences. What in the world are they going to do ? Let 
the whole land be depopulated ? ' No ! If the people will 
not come to them, they must go to the people, and force 
upon them the means of health, and insist that proper 
measures should be used for the suppression of the plague." 
It needed no application. He understood it, and I believe, 



AGGRESSIVE CffillS'riAKITY. 



31 



by the spirit of God, lie was enabled to see his mistake, to 
take it home, and set to work to do something for perishing 
souls. 

Men are preoccupied, and it is for us to go and force it 
upon their attention. Remember, you can do it. There is 
some one soul that you have more influence with than any 
other person on earth — some soul, or souls. Are you doing 
all you can for their salvation ? Your relatives, friends, and 
acquaintances are to be rescued. Thank God ! we are rescu- 
ing the poor people all over the land by thousands. There 
they are, to be looked at, and talked with, and questioned — 
people rescued from the depths of sin, degradation, and 
woe — saved from the worst forms of crime and infamy ; 
and, if He can do that, He can save your genteel friends, if 
only you will go to them desperately and determinedly. 
Take them lovingly by the button-hole, and say, " My dear 
friend, I never spoke to you closely, carefully and prayer- 
fully about your soul." Let them see the tears in your eyes ; 
or, if you cannot weep, let them hear the tears in your voice, 
and let them realize that you feel their danger, and are in 
distress for them. God will give His Holy Spirit, and they 
will be saved. 

I was going to note that both texts imply opposition — 
for, He adds, " Lo, I am with you always, even to the end 
of the world." As much as if He had said, " You will have 
need of my presence. Such aggressive, determined warfare 
as this will raise all earth and hell against you ; " and then He 
says to Paul, " I will be with thee, delivering thee from the 
people and the Gentiles unto whom I send thee." Why 
would they need this ? Because the Gentiles would soon 
be up in arms against him, and indeed they were. 

Opposition ! It is a bad sign for the Christianity of this 



32 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



day that it provokes so little opposition. If there was no 
other evidence of it being wrong, I should know it from 
that. When the Church and the world can jog along com- 
fortably together, you may be sure there is something wrong. 
The world has not altered. Its spirit is exactly the same 
as it ever was, and if Christians were equally faithful and 
devoted to the Lord, and separated from the world, living 
so that their lives were a reproof to all ungodliness, the 
world would hate them as much as ever it did. It is the 
Church that has altered, not the world. You say, "We 
should be getting into endless turmoil." Yes ! "I came 
not to bring peace on the earth, but a sword." There 
would be uproar. Yes ; and the Acts of the Apostles 
are full of stories of uproars. One uproar was so great 
that the Chief Captain had to get Paul over the shoulders 
of the people, lest he should have been torn in pieces. 
" What a commotion ! " you say. Yes ; and, bless God, if 
we had the like now we should have thousands of sinners 
saved. 

"But," you say, "see what a very undignified position 
this would bring the Gospel into." That depends on what 
sort of dignity you mean. You say, "We should always 
be getting into collision with the powers that be, and with 
the world, and what very unpleasant consequences would 
result." Yes, dear friends, there always have been unpleas- 
ant consequences to the flesh, when people were following 
God and doing His will. 66 But," you say, " would'nt it be 
inconsistent with the dignity of the Gospel ? " It depends 
from what standpoint you look at it. It depends upon what 
really constitutes the dignity of the Gospel. What does 
constitute the dignity of the Gospel ? Is it human dignity, 
or is it Divine ? Is it earthly, or is it heavenly dignity ? 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



33 



It was a very undignified thing, looked at humanly, to die 
on the cross between two thieves. That was the most un- 
dignified thing ever done in this world, and yet, looked at 
on moral and spiritual grounds, it was the grandest spectacle 
that ever earth or heaven gazed upon, and methinks that 
the inhabitants of heaven stood still and looked over the 
battlements at that glorious, illustrious Sufferer, as He hung 
there between heaven and earth. The Pharisees, I know, 
spat upon the humbled Sufferer, and wagged their heads and 
said, " He saved others, himself He cannot save." Ah ! but 
He was intent on saving others. That was the dignity of 
Almighty strength allying itself with human weakness, in 
order to raise it. It was the dignity of eternal wisdom 
shrouding itself in human ignorance, in order to enlighten 
it. It was the dignity of everlasting, unquenchable love, 
baring its bosom to suffer in the stead of its rebellious 
creature — man. Ah! It was incarnate God standing in 
the place of condemned, apostate man — the dignity of love ! 
love! love! 

Oh, precious Saviour! save us from maligning Thy Gospel 
and Thy name by clothing it with our paltry notions of 
earthly dignity, and forgetting the dignity which crowned 
Thy sacred brow as Thou didst hang upon the cross ! That 
is the dignity for us, and it will never suffer by any gentle- 
man here carrying the Gospel into the back slums or alleys 
of any town or city in which he lives. That dignity will 
never suffer by any employer talking lovingly to his servant 
maid or errand boy, and looking into his eyes with tears of 
sympathy and love, and trying to bring his soul to Jesus. 
That dignity will never suffer even though you should have 
to be dragged through the streets with a howling mob at 
your heels, like Jesus Christ, if you have gone into those 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



streets for the souls of your fellow-men and the glory of 
God. Though you should be tied to a stake, as were the 
martyrs of old, and surrounded by laughing and taunting 
fiends and their howling followers — that will be a dignity 
which shall be crowned in heaven, crowned with everlasting 
glory. If I understand it, that is the dignity of the Gospel 
— the dignity of love. I do not envy, I do not covet any 
other. I desire no other, — God is my witness, — than the 
dignity of love. 

Oh, friends ! will you get this baptism of love ! Then you 
will, like the Apostles, be willing to push your limbs into a 
basket, and so be let down by the wall, if need be, or suffer 
shipwreck, hunger, peril, nakedness, fire, or sword, or even 
go to the block itself, if thereby you may extend His king- 
dom and win souls for whom He shed His blood. The 
Lord fill us with this love and baptise us with this fire, and 
then the Gospel will arise and become glorious in the earth, 
and men will believe in us, and in it. They will feel its 
power, and they will go down under it by thousands, and, 
by the grace of God, they SHALL. 



SERMON II. 



A PURE GOSPEL. 

And I said, Who art thou, Lord? And He said, I am Jesus whom thou perse- 
cutest. But rise, and stand upon thy feet : for I have appeared unto thee 
for this purpose, to make thee a minister and a witness both of these things 
which thou hast seen, and of those things in the which I will appear unto 
thee : Delivering thee from the people, and from the Gentiles, unto whom 
now I send thee, to open their eyes, and to turn them from darkness to 
light, and from the power of Satan unto God, that they may receive for- 
giveness of sins, and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith 
that is in me. Whereupon, O king Agrippa, I was not disobedient unto the 
heavenly vision: but shewed first unto them of Damascus, and at Jerusa- 
lem, and throughout all the coasts of Judea, and then to the Gentiles, that 
they should repent and turn to God, and do works meet for repentance. — 
Acts xxv. 15-20. 

The second indispensable condition we are going to note, 
this afternoon, to Aggressive Christianity is, a Pure 
Gospel. I mean by that, God's own pure metal — the una- 
dulterated Gospel of Jesus Christ. 

There seems, now-a-days, in the Church and the world, as 
many different views of the Gospel as there are of secondary 
matters and of minor doctrines. One person has one notion 
of the Gospel, another has another, until there has come to 
be a fearful distraction in the minds of many who are con- 
stantly listening to what is called the Gospel. May God the 
Holy Ghost help us to look at it impartially and carefully ! 

First, let me try to define what is the Gospel. " Oh ! " 
people say, "it is good news." Yes, thank God, it 
is good news, indeed — news without which we must all 
have been lost. It is the news of the free, measureless, un- 

35 



36 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



deserved, reconciling mercy of God, offered to me through 
the vicarious, infinite, glorious sacrifice of His Son, to the 
end that I may BE SAVED from sin here and from Hell 
hereafter ! ! But this news involves a great deal. It is the 
news of a definite, practical end, involving conditions ; for, • 
even good news to me, involves certain conditions on my 
part, if I am to procure the good which the news brings. 
Secondly, I will try to explain the conditions on which 
the Gospel is available to me. 

Let me illustrate this ; and I am particularly anxious that 
you should all understand me. Supposing that a province 
of this empire were in rebellion against our Sovereign. Sup- 
posing that the people of that province had trampled under 
foot our laws, and set up their own in opposition — and sup- 
pose the Queen, in her gracious clemency, desired not to de- 
stroy these rebels, but to save them, what would be the 
necessary and indispensable condition in the very nature of 
the case, in order for her to save them ? Not merely a proc- 
lamation of pardon. That would be a glorious movement 
towards the result, but there would want something else; 
for a proclamation of pardon merely, whilst the rebels re- 
main in an unchanged state, would only be giving them 
greater facilities for further rebellion. Evidently, in the 
nature of the case, it is a necessity that a change of mind 
should be produced in the rebels themselves, for the Queen 
not only wants to save them from destruction, but to restore 
them to allegiance and obedience to herself, and, unless she 
does this, they will never become dutiful and obedient sub- 
jects. There will never be anything but anarchy, confusion 
and rebellion in that province unless those rebels undergo a 
change of mind. They must be brought back to allegiance 
and obedience to the Queen. 



A PURE GOSPEL. 



37 



Just so with God's proclamation of salvation. The mis- 
chief is in ns. Take the illustration of the Prodigal Son. 
The mischief was all in him — not in his father. The father 
loved him before he went away, and the father loved him 
afterwards. The father's benevolent heart yearned over him 
all the time he was away, and many a time, perchance, he 
went to the roof of his house to look over the expanse of 
country over which the rebellious lad had gone, and wondered 
whether he would ever come back. The father's heart was 
yearning over him all the time. How was it that he could 
not be reinstated in the father's love and in the family priv- 
ileges ? Because there needed a change of heart — a change 
of mind in him. If he had come back to the old homestead 
with the same rebellious spirit in him, the same desire to be 
free from the father's oversight, the same unwillingness to 
be put under the Father's dominion and discipline, he 
would still have been a rebel and a prodigal. In the very 
nature of the case, until there was the necessary change, a 
wise and righteous father could not pardon him ; he must 
insist, though he loves him dearly, upon a certain change of 
mind before he can consistently pardon him. 

Just so. The laws of mind are the same when operated 
upon by either God or man. This is not laying any neces- 
sity upon God any more than He has laid upon Himself. 
He has made us with a certain mental constitution, and 
therefore He must adapt the conditions and means of our 
salvation to that mental constitution, otherwise He would 
reflect upon his own wisdom in having given it to us at the 
first. Therefore when he purposes to save man He must 
save him as man — not as a beast or a machine ! He must 
save him as man, and he must propound such a scheme as 
will fit and adapt itself to man's nature. Just as the father 



38 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



might not pardon the prodigal, irrespective of the prodigal's 
state of mind and heart, so neither can God pardon the sin- 
ner irrespective of the state of his mind and heart. 

I know, by personal contact with hundreds of souls, that 
there is an alarming amount of misunderstanding and of 
what I consider false apprehension of the Gospel of Christ 
at this point. Hence, you have speakers saying, without 
anything to guard or qualify their words, " Only believe, and 
you shall be saved; " " Whosoever believeth hath everlast- 
ing life. " Blessed and glorious truth, when rightly applied, 
and applied to the right characters, but dangerous error, in 
my opinion, when applied indiscriminately to unawakened, 
unrepenting, rehellious sinners. I have met with disastrous 
consequences of this all over the land — so disastrous that 
I would not like to repeat them here. ]STow, I say, we should 
be careful to let the people understand what we mean by the 
Gospel : I dare not do any other. I am so satisfied of the 
thousands of souls that are deceived at this point, that, while 
God gives me voice to speak, I dare not but try to warn 
them, and show them their fatal mistake. 

Returning to our illustration — you say, " The man is, so 
to speak, dead in trespasses and sins. How can he see his 
own error ? How can he lay down the weapons of rebellion? 
How can he, by himself, come back to the Father ? " Grant- 
ed. Hence, God, in his wisdom and love, has provided for 
that incapacity which man has induced by his rebellion, by 
the gift of His Spirit. You say, " The parallel is not perfect 
between your illustration and the thing illustrated." ]STo, 
it is not in that point ; because temporal rebels can find out 
by themselves the insanity and wickedness of their course. 
They can see where it will lead them. They can see the 
destructive consequences, and be sorry for the course they 



A PURE GOSPEL. 



39 



have taken. They can lay down their weapons of rebellion, 
and they can conform to the conditions on which the Queen 
issues her proclamation. You say, " Yes, they can do it, but 
man cannot." Of course, because he has so hardened his 
heart that even if he can, he never will without the Holy 
Spirit of God. Hence, God has taken compassion on us, and 
sent His Spirit into the world for this purpose — " To con- 
vince the world of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment." 
Thus he opens our eyes, and shows us our lost estate. Hav- 
ing, by the Holy Ghost, made us realize our desperate condi- 
tion, then comes the Gospel to meet us just where we are, 
on condition that we abandon our evil ways, and do the 
works meet for repentance, which we are able to do by the 
power of the Holy Spirit, as well as to lay down the weapons 
of our rebellion and accept of Christ, put our neck under his 
yoke, and pledge ourselves in heart to follow Him all the 
days of our life. These are the conditions involved, and 
this is the end the Gospel contemplates, and there you see 
the Gospel accomplishes its end in this case. The heart of 
the rebel is won back to its Lord, and the indispensible 
change has taken place in the being himself. He has come 
back to God. His eyes are opened to see the evil of sin, 
and the desperate state he is in. Tired of himself, and tired 
of his evil ways, as the Prodigal was of the swine-yard, he 
arises, leaves them and goes to his father. 

But now I must stop to meet a difficulty which I know 
will arise in many sincere minds. I feel myself such a 
tender jealousy for the glory of God, that I do highly re- 
spect this feeling in others, and if any one disagrees with my 
views, or my way of putting them, through a feeling of 
jealousy for the glory of God, they have my profound re- 
spect. You will say, "If we are able to abandon our evil 



40 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



courses, and lay down the weapons of rebellion, is not that 
saving ourselves ? 99 No, dear friends ; it is altogether 
different. You see it is the indispensable condition of sal- 
vation in everyone of the nine passages we read, and in 
many others — that we abandon our evil ways. Now, what 
does that mean ? A gentleman in a letter to me said, " We 
cannot save ourselves from heart sins." Granted ; but we 
can will to be saved from them. Then, there is a great dis- 
tinction between those sins of the heart which are involun- 
tary, and those deliberate transgressions of God's law which 
unregenerate men commit. God requires me to abandon 
all that I can, as a condition of salvation, and then, when He 
saves He will give me power to abandon all that I could not 
before. The Prodigal had to come away from the swine- 
yard, the filth, and the husks, before he got into the father's 
house, and sat down at the father's feast, but when he had 
done so, then the father said, " Come in," and he brought 
the best robe and put it on him, and killed the fatted calf, 
and put the ring of forgiveness upon his hand. Hence, as 
the old divines used to put it, "You must wait for the Lord 
in the path of His ordinances," the path of obedience, as far 
as is possible to you. And is there any other way ? Can 
the drunkard wait for Him while he abides at his cup ? 
Can the thief wait for Him while he continues in his diaboli- 
cal trade ? Can any man indulging in absolute open sin 
find the Lord ? Must he not, as the Saviour says, cut off 
that right hand, and pluck out that right eye ? He never 
can cleanse his guilt, but he CAN cut off his hand, and 
when he does that, the Holy Spirit will come in and apply 
the Blood, and do the cleansing. 

Therefore, you perceive, I take the Gospel to be aiming 
not merely at saving, but restoring us, If it were merely to 



A PURE GOSPEL. 



41 



save me without restoring me, what would it do for me ? 
As a moral agent, if the Gospel fails to PUT ME EIGHT, 
it will fail eternally to make me happy ; and if you were to 
transplant me before the throne, and put me down in the 
inner circle of archangels with a sense of wrong in my heart, 
being morally out of harmony with the laws of God, and the 
moral laws of the universe, I should be as miserable as if I 
were in Hell, and should want to get away. I must be 
made right as well as treated as if I were right. I must 
be changed as well as justified. This is the Gospel put as 
clearly in our text as it could be, and also the Epistles 
written by the Apostle Paul, the great expounder of the 
doctrine of justification by faith. It was through the lips 
of the glorified Lord Himself, after He had risen, to the 
great Apostle of the Gentiles, after the Gospel dispensation 
was fully opened, that this unmistakable commission was 
given, " Unto whom I now send thee to' open their eyes." 
What to, their sins ? As Peter opened the eyes of the murder- 
ers of our Lord, on the Day of Pentecost, " Whom ye have 
crucified and slain ; " driving in the convicting truth of God 
until, in their agony, they cried out, " WHAT MUST WE 
DO ? 99 He tore off the bandages which Satan had wrapped 
around them, and drove them as with the schoolmaster's 
lash, until he drove them to the cross of the crucified One. 
" Open their eyes " — that is the first thing. Oh ! how my 
soul has often shrunk and wept under the sense of the awful 
responsibility this brings upon us Christians. The world is 
asleep. Yes, friends, your relations, your neighbors — they 
are asleep. They are preoccupied. They are full of the 
world, and the things of the world. They will not think — 
they will not see — they will not look into the Word of Life. 
Your responsibility comes here tenfold, Go anp wake; 



42 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



them! YOU CAN DO IT, *if you have the Holy Ghost 
in you! 

Some people would have said to the Lord Jesus, " What 
a great deal you are making of human agency, for, after all, 
Paul is but a man, and you are setting him to open the 
eyes of the unconverted, and turn them from darkness to 
light, and from the power of Satan unto God : are you not 
making too much of human effort ? " But the Lord Jesus 
knew what He was about. He knew that Paul had a power 
in him which every really renewed child of God has — the 
Holy Ghost — to equip him of this work, and He says, 
" Unto whom now I send thee to open their eyesP Go and 
awake them to a sense of their danger. Take them, meta- 
phorically speaking, by the collar and shake them and make 
them realize their peril, as you would if they were asleep in 
a burning house ! ! And then when you have awakened 
them, what are you to do ? Leave them alone ? No, no, for 
Christ's sake, no. Take hold of them by the mighty power 
of your moral suasion and zeal, and love, and energy, and 
turn them right " round from sin and Satan unto God." 

Jesus Christ set Paul to do this, and Paul did it. He 
says, " Knowing, therefore, the terror of the Lord, we per- 
suade men." His was no meek and mild putting of the 
truth, and leaving people to do as they liked. "Knowing, 
therefore, the terror of the Lord, we persuade men, 
because we thus judge that if one died for all, then were all 
dead ; " and, oh ! what success the Lord gave him in his 
desperate enterprise. What multitudes did he persuade, and 
succeed in turning round from darkness to light, and from 
the power of Satan unto God ! Turn them round ! " Oh ! 
but," you say, "if they are turned round from darkness, 
which represents evil, to light, which represents righteous- 



A PURE GOSPEL. 



43 



nessj are they not saved ? " No, not yet. This is only the 
change effected in their will, which is beautifully exemplified 
by Paul in Romans vii. — willing to keep the law, willing 
to obey God, willing to do His will, and follow Him, yea, 
struggling, but yet unable, though they are brought round 
from the voluntary choice or embrace of evil, and the volun- 
tary service of the Devil, round to the voluntary choice and 
embrace of righteousness and the service of God, they are 
not yet able to do it. 

Now, don't say I said they were able. Don't mis- 
represent me, as some people do. I will try to be clear, and 
I say there is all the difference in the world betiveen being 

WILLING TO LET JESUS CHRIST SAVE ME FROM MY SINS, AND 

saving myself from them. It is exactly this change in 
the attitude of the will which God demands as a CON- 
DITION OF THE EXERCISE OF HIS POWER. It is so 
in all the miracles. " Wilt thou be made whole ? " He 
says to the man with the withered hand, " Stretch out thy 
withered hand." The man might have said, "Lord, what 
an unreasonable request. Are you come to mock me in my 
misery ? " Oh ! but Jesus Christ knew what He wanted in 
the man. He wanted the response of the man's will. He 
wanted the man to say, "Yes, Lord;" and when he said 
that, the Lord put the strength into the shoulder-bone, and 
he stretched it out, and it was made whole. There are many 
souls just there — they will not say, "'Yes, Lord," to some 
condition which the Spirit puts upon them. I could give 
you some heart-rending illustrations on this point. I am 
satisfied that this Gospel-enlightened England of ours is full 
of people just at this point who come crying, and praying, 
and longing, as they call it, after God. They come up to 
Jesus Christ again and again. They try to believe; they 



44 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



want to follow Him, but they are kept back by the right 
hand and the right eye which the Holy Ghost has told them 
they must cut off and pluck out before He will receive them. 
They will not do it, and so they are ever learning, and never 
able to come to a knowledge of the truth. You must re- 
nounce evil in your will. You must will to "obey the 
truth." You must say, " Yes, Lord." 

I remember, on one occasion, in the West of England, I 
had been delivering week-day morning addresses. We had 
a blessed meeting on this particular day. We began at half- 
past ten, and the Lord was so with us that He supplied the 
want of refreshment till we had it at 5.30. He made up for 
the want of dinner or tea. A gentleman was there, with 
whose appearance I was struck. He was tall, and intelligent, 
a man of about forty or forty-five. He knelt down without any 
emotion, more than deep solemnity, at the end of the Com- 
munion rail. I had been talking about the reason people 
walked in darkness — controversy with the Holy Spirit. I 
said to him, "My dear sir, have you had a controversy with 
the Holy Spirit ? " " Yes, " he said ; u I have had one for 
fifteen years. I am ashamed to say it, and it has eaten up 
all the joy and power of my Christian life, and I have been 
a useless cumberer of the ground." I did not know till after- 
wards that he was a deacon of the church, and had come up 
there in the sight of all the congregation. I said, " Well, 
my dear sir, you know the Gospel as well as I do. It is of 
no use to preach faith to you until you are willing to renounce 
your idol." He said most emphatically, " I know it." I said, 
" Are you willing ? " Oh, with what tenacity the human 
heart holds on to its idols ! Though he had come up to the 
rail in the face of that congregation, so deeply was he under 
the power of the Spirit, yet he hesitated, I said, " Well, my 



A PURE GOSPEL. 



45 



dear sir, you must make up your mind. In your case, it is 
between the choice of this, whatever it may be, and Christ ; " 
and I retired under the pulpit pillars for a minute, and left 
him to himself and the Lord. I lifted up my heart to God 
for him, and then I went back, and said, " Will you renounce 
it ? " and, lifting up his eyes to heaven, and bringing his 
hand down upon the Communion rail, he said, " By the grace 
of God, I do," and his whole frame heaved with agony, but 
he stepped into immediate liberty. His blessed Saviour was 
waiting with arms wide open. There was only this accursed 
thing which had stood between them, and when he trampled 
it under his feet, and was willing to forsake it, as a natural 
consequence, he sprang into the everlasting arms, and received 
the assurance of salvation. It was all over the town for the 
next fortnight. People remarked, " Did you ever see such a 
change come over a man as has come over Mr. So-and-so ; he 
is like a new man. He prays in the prayer-meeting with such 
fervor. He was at the chapel doors, speaking to the uncon- 
verted, and inviting them to come back. He is visiting up 
and down the town — why, he's a new man ! " Was there 
any change in the gospel ? Had he received any fresh light ? 
It was only the old story — only that he had put away the 
idol, and trampled under foot that which was keeping the life- 
power of God out of his soul. 

Here is another case. At some services in the West of 
England, a gentleman largely interested in an unlawful busi- 
ness, came every night for five weeks, and used to sit there, 
the picture of despair and wretchedness, till after ten o'clock. 
He went on in this way until his friends thought he would 
lose his reason. He was walking about his bedroom 
with his Bible open, kneeling down every now and then, 
struggling and wrestling and trying to believe; but every 



46 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



time he thought of this ungodly business which he could not 
give up, despair seized him (for he thought of his money — 
he thought of the consequences to his family), until at last 
he said, " Money or no money, I will settle it." He gave it 
up, came out, and got saved at once. 

ISTow I think these illustrations make clear what I mean, 
by the abandonment, the turning from the embrace of evil 
to the embrace of righteousness as an indispensable condition 
of forgiveness. Hence the Holy Ghost has carefully main- 
tained this order — "to open their eyes and to turn them 
round from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan 
unto God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins and an 
inheritance among them that are sanctified by faith that is 
in me." You see what a different thing this is to presenting 
Christ to people just as they are, where they are, doing what 
they like. You see what a different Gospel it comes to, in- 
sisting upon a thorough renouncement and abandonment of 
evil as a condition of Jesus Christ receiving the sinner. 
This was Paul's Gospel. Will you give me any other defi- 
nition of it ? Can you explain it in any other way ? Paul 
goes on to show us how he understood : — " Whereupon, 0 
King Agrippa ! I was not disobedient unto the heavenly 
vision, but showed first unto them of Damascus and Jerusa- 
lem and then to the Gentiles, they should repent and turn 
to God, and do works meet for repentance." Was this like 
saying " Only believe" without respect to any antecedent 
change of mind ? Can anybody show me anything here in 
the slightest degree approximating to the Antinomian 
Gospel which has been grafted on to some other of Paul's 
utterances ? And yet surely the Apostle could not contra- 
dict himself. His writings about faith must be in harmony 
with this most unmistakable putting of the Gospel to both 



A PURE GOSPEL. 



47 



Jews and Gentiles. Moreover, did he tell Agrippa and 
Festus to believe ? No, he left them trembling at it, because 
they were not willing to abandon their sins and put away 
the accursed thing, but to the Philippian gaoler, who said, 
" Men and brethren, what must I do ? " and who brought 
them out and began to wash their stripes, thus doing works 
meet for repentance at once, he said, " Believe on the Lord 
Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved." Ah! my friend, 
you may try to get hold of Christ to your dying hour and 
at the last be lost, while you are holding on to your idols. 
If he could have saved us after that fashion we needed no 
Christ, we could have gone into heaven without a Saviour ; 
but He came to save His people from their sins, and while 
you are in love with your sins you may struggle and tremble 
as Agrippa and Felix did, and as the young ruler did, and 
you wilL meet a similar fate. You must let go your idols 
and be willing that Jesus should come and save you, not 
down among the dirt and mud of sin, but lift you out of it, 
wash you, make you clean, and keep you clean, circumcise 
your hearts, and put His law in them, and then you shall 
know the gladness of His salvation ! 

I have some people writing to me in this condition. If 
they are here let me say to them — This is what you 
have to do — let go your idols and say as the gentle- 
man said of whom I told you, "Poverty or no poverty, 
business or no business, position or no position, suffering or 
prosperity never mind — Christ, Christ, I let go all for 
Thee!" 

Have you forsaken evil? Have you cut off the right 
hand ? Have you plucked out the right eye ? I have 
people coming to me in services of this character, groaning 
and sometimes worn to skeletons. They tell me they are in 



48 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



distress, they have got into bondage, they want the joy of 
the Lord and His daily fellowship, and when I ask the 
reason, they generally say, "Well, I don't know, but it 
seems to be want of faith." Now I say to such people : — 
Now let us see what this want of faith arises from. 
There must be a cause. I am afraid that sin lieth at the 
door, and when we come to close quarters we generally find 
there is some idol, some course of conduct, or some doubtful 
conduct which keeps God out of the soul, and when this is 
confessed and renounced, people get the presence of God and 
go away rejoicing in Him. It is so in nearly every case. 
God does not arbitrarily withdraw Himself from His people. 
He wants to dwell with them. We are His proper abode. 
He has promised to come and abide with His people, and if 
He does not, depend upon it there is something in the 
Temple offensive to Him, something with which He will not 
dwell. Will you put that away, and consecrate your hearts 
this day unto the Lord to be His temple, His temple only, 
and leave consequences with Him. He will be able to look 
after His own. 

Then, lastly, when you have come to this decision, then 
look and live ; take the final leap into the arms of a crucified 
Saviour. With some souls who have been the subjects of 
the drawings of the Spirit for years, the difficulty is in the 
surrendering their wills. They have learned to reason with 
God; they have lost the little children's way; they are 
afraid to take the final leap, and there they stand before 
the Cross, not conscious of anything between them and 
Christ. What are you to do ? What Paul told the Philip- 
pian gaoler to do — " Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ;" 
and you say, " What is that, and how am I to believe ? ' ' 
Wonderful how it has got mystified ! Believe what ? That 



A PURE GOSPEL. 



49 



He just means what He says ; and that when you come, 
He does receive — not He will to-morrow, not He did yester- 
day, but that He does now, this moment. When did He 
receive the sinners who came to Him on earth ? When 
they came. Just the same will He receive you. "Oh! 
but," you say, "I do not feel right." No, of course not. 
Do you not see, you are to be saved by faith. If you are 
to be saved by faith, you must exercise faith before you 
will be saved. If it is by faith you are to be saved, you 
must believe first, and be saved afterwards, if it is only the 
next second. "But," you say, "I do not feel it." No, but 
you will feel it when you have got it. You must believe it 
before you get it, on the testimony of His Word — "I will 
in no wise cast you out;" "Him that cometh:" "Now I 
come, Lord, I come. I have put away my idols ; I have put 
away everything that consciously stood between me and 
Thee. I will to serve Thee, I will to follow Thee, I will to 
put my neck under Thy yoke forever, asking no more questions, 
but being willing for Thee to lead me whithersover Thou wilt. 
Now, Lord, I come — Thou dost receive." Leap off the poor 
old stranded wreck of your own effort, or your own righteous- 
ness, or your own sinfulness, or your own un worthiness, or 
anything else of your own, into the glorious lifeboat. It is on 
the top of the wave this afternoon — another step, and you 
will be in — one bound, and you will feel the loving arms of 
your Saviour around you. Faith is trust, trust. He will do 
for you what he promised. Believe that God does now accept 
you wholly for the sake of the sacrifice of His blessed Son ; that 
He justifies you freely from all things from which you could 
not be justified by the law. You stand a condemned, guilty, 
hell-bound criminal, and nothing but His free, sovereign mer- 
cy «an save you. Throw yourself upon this, and the moment 



50 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



you do so in real faith you will be saved. Perhaps you will 
say, as a curate of the Church of England, writing to 
me last week, said, " I refuse to be saved by logic." So 
did I, and I struggled for six weeks because I refused to 
be saved by logic — because I would have a living, personal 
Christ. I admire your decision, my brother, if you are here, 
but let this logic help you ; nevertheless, Jesus Christ has 
promised, if I come, that He will receive me — then, I do 
come, and He does receive me, for He cannot lie. Let that 
help you. Faith is not logic, but logic may help faith. 

Oh ! how I should rejoice if some of you were to launch 
into the arms of Jesus this moment. It often happens that 
while I am speaking souls do get into the ark of God's mercy, 
and come, or write to tell me afterwards that the Spirit has 
come, and he is crying " Abba Father," and now they know 
they have passed from death unto life. They don't want 
logic then. It is a matter of demonstration with them. 
When you have come up to the place where saving faith is 
possible to you, you have no more to do, no more to suffer, 
no more to pay. By simple trust we are saved. This is the 
way every saint on earth was saved. This is the way every 
saint in glory was saved. This is the way we are kept 
saved, too, by living, daily, obedient faith. The Lord 
help you just now. Let the idol go. Put away the ungod- 
ly companion. Give up the unlawful business, or the 
worldly conformity. Put away whatever has stood between 
you and Jesus. Trample it under foot and press through 
the crowd of difficulties as the woman did, and go right up 
and touch Him with this touch of faith, and you shall live 
and know that you are healed. Then this Gospel will 
be good news indeed to you, and Jesus will be the Author 
of salvation to you, because you OBEY HIM ! 



SERMON III. 



ADAPTATION OF MEASURES. 

I have chosen five or six different passages, all exhibiting 
the principle of Adaptation, on which I am to speak. The 
first is 1 Cor. ix. 20-22: — 

" And unto the Jew I became as a Jew, that I might gain the Jews ; to them 
that are under the law, as under the law, that I might gain them that 
are under the law ; to them that are without law, as without law (being 
not without law to God, but under the law to Christ), that I might gain 
them that are without law." 

To them that are without law as without law, but here he 
carefully guards himself by a parenthesis, lest he should 
seem to favor a lawless Antinomian gospel, "not without 
law to God, not independent of the great moral law, but un- 
der the law to Christ," in which is fulfilled all law. 

" To the weak became I as weak, that I might gain the weak : I am made 
all things to all mem that I might by all means save some." 

" To the weak became I as weak," — masterpiece of human 
humility ! Most people want to appear strong, but here is 
a man coming down, and appearing a weak man, that he 
might win the weak. That is the humility of Jesus Christ. 

The Lord give us the like spirit ! Again, 1 Cor. xii. 4-7 : — 

"Now there are diversities of gifts, but the same spirit ; and there are dif- 
ferences of administration, but the same Lord ; and there are diversi- 
ties of operations, but it is the same God which worketh all in all." 

Some people want the Spirit to work in everyone alike, 
and in all times the same, but He chooses to have diversities. 
Again, Galatians iii. 26-28 : — 

51 



52 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



"Eor as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ. 
There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is 
neither male nor female : for ye are all one in Christ Jesus." 

That is, so far as the privileges, duties, and obligations of 
Christ's kingdom are concerned. There is neither national- 
ity nor sex ; and Galatians v. 6 : — 

" For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircum- 
cision ; but faith which worketh by love." 

All mere ordinances and ceremonies come under circum- 
cision. And 2 Timothy iv. 2 : — 

" Preach the word : be instant in season, out of season ; reprove, rebuke, 
exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine." 

What a hue-and-cry there is because the Salvation Army 
people save men out of season ! And Jude 22, 23 : — 

"And of some have compassion, making a difference : and others save witn 
fear, pulling them out of the fire." 

" Oh, no," say some of our conventional friends, " you shall 
not make a difference ! " Now, in all these six texts, the 
principle of Adaptation is most distinctly laid down. 

Now we have spent the two last Sabbath afternoons in 
trying to point out our view of the characteristics of a pure 
Gospel, and I think we have succeeded in doing this so clear- 
ly that no person who followed us carefully can imagine for 
a moment that we would hold, or teach, any adaptation of 
the Gospel itself. As we stated before, we deemed this so 
above all adaptation — so above any change, that we would 
not be responsible for transposing its order, much less alter- 
ing its matter ; that we would not take a dot off one of the 
" i's," so sacredly intact do we believe the Gospel of Christ 
in its matter ought to be kept. We believe also that the 
order of God ought to be strictly maintained; that it is as 
rational and true in philosophy as it is in divinity ; and that 
the way the Spirit operates upon the minds of men is just 



ADAPTATION OF MEASURES. 



53 



the same as ever. This we clearly and most carefully 
pointed out, so that what we have to say now you will 
please bear in mind, has nothing to do with the GOSPEL 
MESSAGE ITSELF. We have tried to show our idea (or 
what we believe to be the Holy Spirit's idea) of a pure Gos- 
pel ; but when we come to speak of modes and measures, 
that is quite another thing. I think, from the texts we have 
read, and from many others equally plain and relevant, that 
we find it a most easily gathered truth, running all the way 
through the New Testament, that forms and ceremonies are 
nothing except as they embody and express real spiritual 
life and truth. That circumcision is nothing, and that un- 
circumcision is nothing ; baptism is nothing, and being un- 
baptized is nothing ; the Lord's Supper is nothing, and ab- 
staining from the Lord's Supper is nothing, in itself as a 
form, for he embraces under circumcision all mere outward 
forms and ceremonies ; and all these are nothing, but " keep- 
ing the commandments of god : " that is, you may have 
all these performed upon you, and regularly perform them 
yourselves, and be but sounding brass and tinkling cymbals, 
if you keep not the commandments of God ; " for circumcis- 
ion availeth nothing, in another place, and uncircumcision 
availeth nothing, but faith — what sort? — that work- 
eth by love : that proves its obedience by its deeds. There- 
fore, we start with that lying clearly before us as a funda- 
mental truth in every page of the New Testament, that forms 
and ceremonies, whatsoever they may be, are nothing except 
as they embody and represent real spiritual life, and 
truth and action — action ! Now, it was the great sin — 
the crowning condemnation of the Jews — that they had 
frittered away the spirituality and practical bearing of the 
Divine Law, clinging on to those forms and ceremonies 



54 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



which, were instituted only to embody and symbolise it. 
Would to God they had let go the form when they let go 
the spirit. Jesus Christ wishes they had. He tells them 
it would have been far better. He told them they were 
children of the devil, notwithstanding their holding on to 
their relationship to Abraham and all the spiritual forms 
and ceremonies of their ritual. 

They had better have come out and avowed themselves un- 
believers, than have gone on professing to be the children 
of God while they were doing the work of the devil. But 
they would not receive this teaching. It was too cutting for 
them, and so they would not have it. It was true, neverthe- 
less. They frittered away the spirituality of the Divine 
Law, and its practical bearings, and still held on to those 
forms and ceremonies which were instituted only to symbol- 
ise and represent it, hence making, as Jesus said, "His Fath- 
er's house a den of thieves." They held on to the form 
whilst the spirit had gone. They were making " Clean the 
outside of the platter, while inside it was full of rottenness 
and dead men's bones." And, dear friends, all corpses are 
very much alike, when the spirit is gone out of them — one 
is found to be about as good as another. 

Alas ! there is this tendency still in our fallen human 
nature. It is so much easier, or satan makes it look so much 
easier, to an unregenerate man, to rest in a form than to seek 
till he finds the spiritual grace which that form represents. 
That is to say, it is so much easier for an unregenerate man 
to be circumcised or to be baptized, as the case may be, to 
partake of the Lord's Supper, to keep outwardly the Sabbath 
Day, to abstain from acts of immorality and open sin, and 
to be decently moral and religious — all this he can under- 
stand and do for himself, and it looks to him so much easier, 



ADAPTATION OF MEASURES. 



55 



and so it is, in the first instance, than bringing his evil, un- 
regenerate heart to God for Him to circumcise it, and write 
His law in it, as he promises to do under the new covenant. 

Now, that is what God wants every man to do. He wants 
him to bring this heart to Him, and let Him reneiv it. He 
says, " I will circumcise your hearts to keep my law." But, 
no! the unregenerate man rests in the outward form. He 
will not be at the trouble to sacrifice his idols, and cry might- 
ily unto God. He will not seek until he attains the fulfil- 
ment of these promises ; so he sits down and rests in the 
form. 

Alas ! alas ! how many thousands in this so-called Christian 
land of ours to-day are just there. They have got the 
form; they are like the Jews — they are Pharisees with a 
Christian creed instead of a Jewish, the same in character, 
only different in name. That is all the difference, hanging on 
to the creed of Jesus Christ, while they know nothing of its 
spirit, the form without the power; and then deny their 
professed Lord every day. Oh ! are there any of this class 
here ? My friend, my friend, if you never find it out until 
you come to die, you will find it out then, but it may be too 
late. May God, the Holy Spirit, help you to find it out this 
day, and bring that unrenewed, unrepentant, evil heart 
of yours to the Cross ; bring it to God, and wait, and weep, 
if need be, and struggle, and knock, and cry, as He tells you, 
until He does renew it and write His law in it ; then the 
outward form will be the expression of the inward grace. 
Then the fruit will be good, because it springs from a good 
root inside. The Lord help you ! 

This tendency to rest in form is just as great as ever, and, 
instead of putting away their idols, and bringing their Con- 
science to be cleansed and kept clean by the precious blood, 



56 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



prayerfully and carefully walking before God, striving in 
all things to please Him, people get an outside form, but 
live just like the world around them, calling Jesus, "Lord 
Lord/' but not doing the things that He says. Now, I say 
that a pure Gospel requires that we bring our evil hearts 
to God to be renewed, and that we resolutely put away our 
idols, and that we wait on Him by the Cross until He re- 
news our motives, tempers, tendencies, feelings, and dis- 
positions, and makes us new creatures in Christ Jesus. 
Instead of doing this, people go on being circumcised or 
baptized, as the Jews did, and they call themselves " Israel," 
as they did ; whereas, of the spiritual Israel they are utterly 
ignorant. They are the children of Hagar (as Paul says), 
and not the children of the promise. May the Lord help you 
to come and be made children of the promise ! 

Now, as in the individual, there is such a tendency to rest 
in form, so in the church collectively, hence this tendency 
to a formal religion. J ust as it was with the Jews — their 
Temple service and the paraphernalia of Judaism — was all 
in all to them, and they thought that J esus Christ was the 
most awfully severe and uncharitable person who ever 
appeared on the face of the earth, because He told them the 
truth. And the same class of character presents the same 
attitude now. We shall see when we get to the Judgment- 
seat of Christ which is the true charity — that which covers 
up things, or that which tears off the bandages, and shows 
people their hypocrisy, and, as we have just read, reveals to 
them the secrets of their hearts. I fear that we are very 
largely in the same condition as the J ews were when Christ 
came. I say " very largely," for I know that there are grand 
and glorious exceptions ; but I speak of the great whole, and 
I am backed up in this opinion by some of the most thought- 



ADAPTATION OF MEASURES. 



57 



ful and spiritual men of this age. It is the lamentation 
everywhere — this formality and death. It reaches us from 
all parts of the land, yea, from all parts of all lands. I once 
heard a great divine, a leader of spiritual thought in his 
day, who has recently passed to heaven, say, "I consider 
that the writings of the Prophets are far more applicable to 
the state of the churches now than the writings of the New 
Testament, for we are in the same lapsed and fallen con- 
dition, as churches, as Israel of old was." So many think, 
and so many teach. 

If this be the case, WHAT IS TO BE DONE? What 
would strike you should be done in this state of comparative 
— spiritual eclipse ? Evidently it would be madness to go 
on as we are. That will mend nothing ! Somebody must 
strike and do something worthy of the emergency. " There 
is no improving the future, without disturbing the present," 
and the difficulty is to get people to be willing to be dis- 
turbed! We are so conservative by nature — especially 
some of us. We have such a rooted dislike to have anything 
rooted up, disturbed, or knocked down. It is as much the 
work of God, however, to " knock down and pull up, and 
to destroy," as to build up, and God's real ambassadors fre- 
quently have to do as much of one as of the other. This is 
not pleasant work ; but what is necessary to be done ? Is it 
not manifestly necessary that we should go back to the 
simplicity and spirituality of the Gospel, and to the early 
modes of propagating it amongst men ? 

In the two last discourses we tried to show what was 
the pure Gospel — calling men to forsake their sins, to 
cast away their idols, come out from the world of the 
ungodly and be separate in order that their sins might be 
forgiven, and that God might receive them, and they become 



58 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



His sons and His daughters. In the last we spoke of faith 
and what it would do for us. 

Xow, with respect to the outward manifestations and 
propagation of the Gospel, it is equally necessary to go back. 
We have such a heap of rubbish to carry away — the ac- 
cumulated traditionalism of ages to go through and dig 
under — that it sometimes takes a considerable amount of 
time, and force of character, and a great deal of the Spirit 
of God, to enable us to do it. Nevertheless, it must be done 
if we are to reach a better state of things. 

It seems to me, in order to do this we should not shrink 
from a recognition of our lapsed and fallen condition. That 
was what the Jews did at the teaching of Jesus. They 
would not have His reproach. They would not have the 
light because it condemned them. They rejected it. They 
persisted they were the children of Abraham — the children 
of the promise. They persisted they were all right, and 
they pointed to the Temple and to their ceremonialism as a 
proof of it ; they would not have His testimony, would not 
admit that they were wrong. Do not let us imitate them. 
Let us recognise this state of things. Let us look it fairly 
in the face. Honesty is always the best policy both in 
spiritual and in temporal things. There is nothing gained 
by ignoring a disagreeable truth. It is best to face it. 
Now there it is, and the best way is to hail any ray of light 
that comes to us from any part of the heavens, even though 
a carpenter should bring it, as He brought it to them — or a 
fisherman, or a woman. Xever mind — let us hail the light 
and apply it to ourselves. Let us bring our hearts and 
lives out into its blaze, and examine them by it, and improve 
it to our own salvation and to the salvation of others. If 
the Jews had done that they would have been saved and 



ADAPTATION OF MEASURES. 



59 



their nation. " Oh, if thou hadst known, even in this thy 
day, — this twelfth hour of the last day — the things that 
belong unto thy peace, but now, because of thy obstinate 
rejection, they are hid from thine eyes ! " The Lord help 
us to take the light home to ourselves, each one. 

We have seen that it is clearly laid down in the texts I 
have read that the law of adaptation is the only law laid 
down in the New Testament with respect to modes and 
measures. I challenge anybody to find me any other. 
While the Gospel message is laid down with unerring ac- 
curacy, we are left at perfect freedom to adapt our measures 
and modes of bringing it to bear upon men to the circum- 
stances, times, and conditions in which we live — free as 
air. " I became all things to all men." The great Apostle 
of the Gentiles who had thrown off the paraphernalia of 
Judaism years before, yet became as a Jew that he might 
win the Jews. The great, strong intellect became as a 
weak man that he might win the weak. He conformed 
himself to the conditions and circumstances of his hearers, 
in all lawful things, that he might win them ; he let no 
mere conventionalities, or ideas of propriety, stand in his 
way when it was necessary to abandon them. He suffered 
his limbs to be thrust into a basket, and himself let down over 
the wall, when necessary, for the success of his work. He who 
was brave as a lion, and hailed a crown of martyrdom like a 
conquering hero, as he was, yet was willing to submit to 
anything when the requirements of his mission rendered it 
necessary. He adapted himself to the circumstances. He 
was instant in season and out-of-season. Oh ! what a hue- 
and-cry there is about out of season Christianity ; " of some 
making a difference 99 — pulling them out of the fire by the 
hair of the head, if needful, — nevermind — save them, save 



60 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



them. That is the great desideratum. Save them — pull- 
ing them out of the fire. Adapt your measures to your 
circumstances and to the necessities of the times in which 
you live. Now here it seems to me that the church — I 
speak universally — has made a grand mistake, the same 
old mistake which we are so prone to fall into of exalting 
the traditions of the elders into the same importance and 
authority as the Word of God, as the clearly laid down 
principles of the New Testament. 

People contend that we must have quiet, proper, decorous 
services. WHERE IS YOUR AUTHORITY FOR 
THIS ? Not here. I defy any man to show it. I have a 
great deal more authority in this book for such a lively, gush- 
ing, spontaneous, and what you call disorderly service, as the 
Army services sometimes are, in this 14th of Corinthians, 
than you can find for yours. The best insight we get into 
the internal working of a religious service in Apostolic times 
is in this chapter, and I ask you — is it anything like the 
ordinary services of to-day ? Can the utmost stretch of in- 
genuity make it into anything like them ? But that, even, 
is not complete. We cannot get the order of a single ser- 
vice from the New Testament, nor can we get the form of a 
single church government. Hence one denomination think 
theirs is the best form, and another theirs ; so Christendom 
has been divided into so many camps ever since ; but this 
very quarrelling shows the impossibility of getting from the 
New Testament the routine, the order, and the fashion of 
mere modes. They cannot get it, because it is not there ! ! 
Do you think God had no purpose in this omission ? The 
form, modes, and measures are not laid down as in the Old 
Testament dispensation. There is nothing of this stereo- 
typed routinism in the New Testament. Why ? Now 



ADAPTATION OF MEASURES. 



61 



there may be some who may have difficulties in this matter. 
I said to a gentleman, who came to me with this and that 
difficulty about our modes and measures, " I will meet your 
difficulties by bringing them face to face with the bare prin- 
ciples of the New Testament. If I cannot substantiate and 
defend them by that I will give them up for ever. I am not 
wedded to any forms and measures. To many of them I 
have been driven by the necessities of the case. God has 
driven me to them as at the point of the bayonet, as well as 
led me by the pillar of cloud, and when I have brought my 
reluctance and all my own conventional notions, in which I 
was brought up like other people, face to face with the naked 
bare principles of the New Testament, I have not found any- 
thing to stand upon ! I find things here far more extrava- 
gant and extreme, than anything we do — looked at careful- 
ly." Here is the principle laid down that you are to adapt 
your measures to the necessity of the people to whom you 
minister ; you are to take the Gospel to them in such modes 
and habitudes of thought and expression and circumstances 
as will gain for it from them a hearing. You are to speak 
in other tongues — go and preach it to them in such a way 
as they will look at it and listen to it ! Oh ! in that lesson 
we read what beautiful scope and freedom from all set forms 
and formula there was. What freedom for the gushing fresh- 
ness, enthusiasm, and love of those new converts ! What 
scope for the different manifestations of the same spirit ! 
Everything was not cut and dried. Everything was not pre- 
arranged. It was left to the operation of the spirit, and the 
argument that this has been abused is no argument against 
it, for then you might argue against every privilege. Here 
is abundant evidence that these new converts, each one, had 
the opportunity to witness for Jesus, opportunity and scope 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



to give forth, the gushing utterance of his soul, and tell oth- 
er people how he got saved, or the experience the Holy 
Ghost had wrought in him. And look at the result ! " If 
those that are unlearned, or unbelievers, come in, they are 
convinced of all, judged of all ; and thus the secrets of their 
hearts are made manifest, and falling down on their faces, 
they will worship God, and report that God is in you of a 
truth." What unkind things have been said of the Salva- 
tion Army because people have fallen on their faces under 
the convicting power of the Spirit at our meetings ; but you 
see this is Apostolic ! And, oh, friends, what a glorious 
service this would be ! You say it would look so strange. 
More the pity. More the pity that this natural, easy, do- 
mestic, familiar kind of testimony and witnessing of divine 
things should have become strange. May it not be because 
the experience which promoted it has become strange ? May 
it not be that there is no more desire to testify because there 
is little to testify about ? May it not be that there is want 
of the utterance of the Holy Spirit through the tongue be- 
cause there is less of it in the soul ? Oh ! then, should we 
not make haste back to those days of simplicity and power ? 
Should we not pray to be set free from the traditionalism 
and routinism in which Satan has succeeded in lulling us to 
sleep ? I ask any saved man — Do you not remember the 
gushing love and enthusiasm of your first-found liberty ? 
how you longed to tell everybody, and if you had been placed 
in such circumstances as these Corinthian converts, how 
gladly you would have testified to what Jesus had done for 
you. It was only the repressing, keeping down, and ulti- 
mately, I am afraid, the all-but extinguishing of the Holy 
Spirit's urgings that has led to the state in which many of 
you now are, and also the dead way in which many of our 
services are conducted. 



ADAPTATION OF MEASURES. 



63 



Now let us look fairly at these things. I maintain that 
the only qualification — the only indispensible qualification 

— for witnessing for Christ, is the Holy Ghost. Paul, ex- 
pressly, over and over again, abjures all merely human equip- 
ment. He expressly declares that these things were not the 
power, even when they existed, but that it was the Holy 
Ghost. Therefore, give me man, woman, or child with the 
Holy Ghost, full of love and zeal for God, and I say it is a 
great strength and joy to that convert to testify to the church 
and to the world, and it is the bounden duty of the church 
to give him the opportunity to do so. The Lord is going to 
demonstrate in this land, that He is not going to evangelize 
it by finished sermons and disquisitions, but by the simple 
testimony of people saved from sin and the devil, by His power 
and His grace. He is going to do it by witnessing, as He 
began. 

Now I say, read your New Testament on this point, and 
you will be struck with the amazing amount of evidence for 
this unconventional kind of service. The world wants some 
more Pentecosts, — when Peters and Marys shall be so filled 
with the Spirit that they cannot help telling what God has 
done for them — male and female, men, women, and children 

— like the woman of Samaria, who, when she had found Him 
of whom Moses and the Prophets wrote, went and fetched 
her fellow-townsmen and women to hear Him. He wishes 
you to do the same, and this is the way the Lord is going to 
gather out His great and glorious kingdom in these latter 
days by the power of testimony in the Holy Ghost. 'He 
only wants witnesses to be able to go and say, " We speak 
that we do know" — that is the qualification. The Lord is 
multiplying such witnesses. Bless His holy Name. 

But you may say — what did the Master Himself do? 



64 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



Well, lie adopted these very measures. I was so struck with 
this, when someone said. -Why, you are sending people to 
preach who cannot read or write ! " For a moment I was 
staggered, but I asked him. " How many of the Apostles do 
you suppose could read and write when they were first sent 
out ? " And then it was the questioner's turn to be staggered. 
There is no reason to suppose, with but two or three excep- 
tions, that any of them could. Education then was far more 
uncommon than now. It was not reading and writing that 
was the great qualification for preaching Christ: it was 
kxowixg ajto seeing ? It was not the power of eloquence, 
it was being able to cast out devils : that was the test. Give 
me somebody able to cast out devils, and I don't care wheth- 
er they can read or write, or put a grammatical sentence to- 
gether. That is of no consequence whatever. Why did not 
Jesus Christ call the doctors and scribes of His day ? There 
were plenty of them — highly educated men with trained 
and disciplined minds. He was amongst them in the Tem- 
ple, when He was twelve years old. He knew them. How 
was it he did not select these ? He who could have com- 
manded a legion of angels, could surely have commanded a 
few scribes and doctors to go to preach the Gospel. Why 
not ? He acted on the law of adaptation. He wanted His 
Gospel preached to the great masses — not to the select few. 
Not to the educated -'upper ten.'' but to the great masses 
of mankind. How was he to have his Gospel so preached, 
but by men like unto themselves ? They fled from the edu- 
cated doctors. They would not listen to the doctors, and 
they will not now. It may be very wicked, and obstinate 
and foolish, but such is the fact — they never have and they 
never will. Hence. Jesus Christ, instead of working a mira- 
cle, which he never did when it was unnecessary, chose the 



ADAPTATION OF MEASURES. 



65 



weak things of the earth to confound the mighty. He would, 
in the other case, have had first to have untaught all those 
scribes and doctors almost all they had learned. He would 
have had to set them free from the bonds of traditionalism. 
He would have had to remould their minds, and then equip 
them. There was no necessity for this when He found the 
fishermen ready to His hand. They were just the men He 
wanted. They only required tempering with the Holy Ghost, 
and they were ready for the work. They thought as the 
people thought; they spoke with and associated with the 
people, and, in fact, were of them. As he wanted the masses 
of men evangelized, he chose men from amongst the masses 
to evangelize them. Here was infinite wisdom. " I thank 
Thee, oh, Father, that Thou hast hid these things from the 
wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes. Even 
so, Father, for so it seemed good in Thy sight." But he had 
a purpose in it, and the purpose was this — that the Gospel 
might be propagated in all climes and conditions of men, 
through any kind of an agent — Greek, Jew, Barbarian, 
Scythian, man, woman, child. Any person who has experi- 
enced its power in their souls may go and speak it to any- 
body they can get to hear them and everywhere ! We are 
free as air and sunlight as to our choice of agencies, and it 
is time the Church woke up to this. The Lord have mercy 
on us ! Is there not work enough to do ? It makes my ears 
tingle and burn with shame when I hear people saying, " You 
must not send agencies here and there, and we can't have 
our organization interfered with." I say, "Are all the sin- 
ners converted in your neighbourhood ? " Nay ; has every 
poor, lost, wretched soul heard the name of Jesus, and the 
testimony of His Gospel ? Are there not teeming thousands 
round about you who never heard His name, and who care 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



nothing for Him, who live every day trampling His law un- 
der their feet ? For Christ's sake, send somebody after them. 
If they will not have your doctors of divinity and your pol- 
ished divines, get hold of fishermen and costermongers and 
send them ! Let the people have a chance for their souls. 
Let them hear, for if they hear not, how shall they believe ? 
Oh, they are dying for lack of knowledge — they are, friends ; 
thousands, are dying for the lack of knowledge. It is quite 
a common thing for us to get people into our services who 
say, " I never knew there was anything so pretty as that in 
the Bible. I didn't know you were reading from the Bible. 
We never heard anything like that before." Hundreds of 
men in this country were never in a place of worship, save 
to be christened or to be married, and a good many, sad to 
say, are living without being married. -While we have been 
standing upon our dignity, whole generations have 
gone to Hell ! — if the Bible is true. How much longer 
shall we stand there ? If Jesus had stood upon His dignity 
He wouid never have come to die between two thieves. The 
whole work of redemption is a work of humiliation, self-sac- 
rifice and suffering ; and if we are not willing to follow Him 
in that, we may as well give up professing His name. 

The Lord help us to go down, down amongst the fishermen, 
amongst the poor, the weak, the unlearned, the vulgar, to 
" condescend to men of low estate." 



SERMON IV. 



ASSURANCE OF SALVATION. 

"For what the Law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God 
sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned 
sin in the flesh : That the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in 
us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit." — Rom. viii. 3, 4. 

I will try, by God's grace, as much, as in me lies, to deal 
with this subject in a way that shall not provoke contro- 
versy. I do deplore this. I wish there was a way of 
improving the future without disturbing the present, but it 
is a misfortune, I suppose, that there is not, and, however 
carefully we may guard ourselves in trying to lead the Lord's 
people higher, there is always somebody who will quibble 
and make objections and take exceptions. But we cannot 
help this. We must be true to our convictions of God's 
truth, and to what He has taught us, and revealed to us by 
His Spirit, for we speak the things that we do know, and do 
see, and do handle, of the Word of Life. However, I will 
try to keep to ground on which I think all really spiritual 
people will be agreed. And, oh ! may the Holy Spirit give 
us one mind and help us to see in His light, and if there is 
anything we do not see in His light, oh ! that this very hour 
He may show it to us, for He knows that we are all willing 
to see, and only longing and desiring to know the whole 
truth, as it is in Jesus. Let every sincere soul put up this 
prayer for himself and for me, as I put it up for myself and 
for you, that the Holy Spirit may lead us into all truth, at 

67 



68 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



any rate as far as it is important to our own salvation and 
our practical exhibition of the salvation of Christ to other 
people, for a dying world is hanging upon our skirts. They 
are looking at us to find out what religion is. They 
will not come to this Book. They will not even hear about 
it, but they are looking to us to find it out : how momentously 
important it is that we should be truly living epistles, 
known and read of all men. We are epistles, whatever sort 
of doctrine our lives teach. We cannot help ourselves, for 
while we profess to be the Lord's, we are living epistles, 
known and read of all men. 

Specially, then, I want first to look at the 3rd verse of 
the 8th chapter. ^ ow, I thought it would, perhaps, be the 
most profitable way to look at this and meet the experience 
of some who I know are here, by trying to answer the 
question — 

Wherein does the laiv fail to save us ? Then we shall be 
able to see wherein and how Jesus Christ transcends the 
Law. 

First, then, the Law does not fail in giving a knowledge 
of sin, for it is by the Law, as the Apostle says, that I know 
sin. Without the Law I was dead, so dead in sin that I did 
not realize it at all. Its power was so complete over me 
that I did not realize it was sin, and, therefore, was asleep 
and comparatively happy, but when the commandment 
came, "sin revived and I died" — that is, to all hope of 
making myself righteous. The commandment showed me 
the awful chasm there was between me and it. The Holy 
Commandment, just and pure and good — and myself un- 
holy, impure, and unrighteous. A light flashed upon it, and 
I died in despair and utter helplessness. Thus, I say, the 
Law does not fail in giving knowledge of sin, for it is by 
the Law that I get the knowledge of sin. 



ASSURANCE OF SALVATION. 



69 



Secondly, — Neither does the Law fail in begetting a sense 
of guilt and condemnation on account of sin, for it is by the 
Law again that I get this. I not only get the knowledge of 
sin by the Law, but I get the sense of guilt and condem- 
nation for sin by the Law, for the Law comes in and con- 
demns me. It is the spirit of death and condemnation to 
me : it says, " You should have done this, and because you 
have not done it you shall die." I feel that the Law is just 
and good, and yet I feel that I do not keep it, and, there- 
fore, I have the sentence of condemnation upon me because 
I do not keep it. Then the Law does not fail in begetting 
a sense of condemnation and guilt on account of sin. 

Thirdly, — Neither does the Law fail in producing desire 
after righteousness and effort to attain it. The Law begets 
in me the desire after righteousness, by contrasting my 
condition with the purity and holiness of God's Law. I 
see the Law to be good and holy, I see it to be desirable, 
and I desire to attain the righteousness of the Law. I am 
speaking now of a convicted sinner, as the Apostle did when 
speaking of the same character. A convicted sinner sees 
the righteousness and beauty of the Law of God. He sees 
that it is holy, just, and good. He sees that it is intended 
to make him holy, just, and good, for the Law is not sin, as 
the Apostle says, but is ordained unto righteousness, but 
the sinner has failed to attain it because of weakness, but 
he struggles to attain it. The first thing is to set himself 
to strive to attain the righteousness of the Law by his own 
efforts. This was the case with the Apostle. He 
longed to do what he could not, and he constantly did what 
he would not, and, as it was with the Apostle, so it is with 
every convicted sinner on earth. We were constantly long- 
ing after righteousness, We could not help looking on thQ 



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beautiful, pure, and holy law of God, and we longed to keep 
it, and tried again and again until we were tripped down 
again and again, and died in utter despair, never being able 
to attain it for ourselves and of ourselves. So you see the 
Law begets first a knowledge of sin; secondly, it begets 
guilt and condemnation on account of sin; and, thirdly, 
desire after righteousness and effort to obtain it. 

Thus far I think we must all be agreed. Wherein does the 
Law fail ? It does all this for me. It brings me right up, 
as it were, — my schoolmaster lashing me right up to the 
cross, opening my eyes, creating intense desire after holiness 
and efforts for it, — and then it just fails me. Where ? At 
the vital point. It cannot give me power. That is where 
the Law fails. It cannot give me power to fulfil itself. I 
am strengthless through the weakness of the flesh and the 
sinfulness of my nature to keep it, and so I struggle and 
wrestle for power to keep it, but I have not power. " What 
the Law could not do, in that it was weak, God sent His 
Son to do/' and I maintain HE DOES IT, and that is the 
one vital point where the Son transcends the Law. 

But there is a Gospel now-a-days, a Law-Gospel. A 
great deal of the Gospel of these days never gets any 
further than the Law, and some people tell me that it is 
never intended to do so, and then I ask, Wherein does 
Christ Jesus advantage me ? What am I better for such a 
Gospel if my Gospel cannot deliver me from the power of 
sin ? If through the Gospel I cannot get deliverance from 
this " I-would-if-I-could " religion, this " Oh !-wretched-man- 
that-I-am " religion, wherein am I benefitted by it ? Wherein 
does your Gospel do more for me than the Law ? The law 
convinced me of sin and set me desiring and longing after 
righteousness, but wherein is the superiority of J esus Christ 



ASSURANCE OF SALVATION. 



71 



if He cannot lead me further than that ? And I say, very 
well ; your faith is vain, and Christ died in vain, and you 
are yet in your sins if that is all it can do. If that is all 
Jesus Christ can do, His coming is vain, and I am yet in 
my sins and doomed to hug this dead corpse to the last, and 
go down to hell, for death will never do for me what the 
blood and sacrifice of Jesus Christ cannot do for me. If 
Christ cannot supersede the Law then I am lost, and lost 
forever. Wherein, then, does this " Oh !- wretched-man " 
Gospel supersede the Law ? Will anybody point it out to 
me? 

Oh ! but the real Gospel does. The Gospel that repre- 
sents Jesus Christ, not as a system of truth to be received 
into the mind like I should receive a system of philosophy, 
or astronomy, but it represents Him as a real, living, 
mighty Saviour, able to save me now. 

I said to a lady once, who was seeking this deliverance 
and who was struggling and wrestling, as I kneeled by her 
side, — " Wait a minute. Suppose Jesus Christ were here in 
His flesh, as He once was. Suppose he was to come to your 
side now, and put His hand upon you and say, 6 Hush ! I 
know your desire ; I see your heart ; I know what you are 
longing after. You are longing to be delivered from every- 
thing that grieves Me, upon which My pure eyes cannot look 
with allowance. You are wanting to be brought into full 
conformity to My will, and that is what I have come to do 
now. I have come to live with you. I am taking up my 
abode under this roof, and I will never leave your side. I 
will be with you by day and I will be with you by night. I 
will sit at the dinner-table and at the tea-table with you, and 
walk out with you, and go to bed with you, and rise up with 
you. Don't be troubled. I will never leave you and never 



72 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



forsake you. ? Do you think if He were to come and say 
that, you would be able to trust Him ? " 
"Oh! yes." 

" You would not be afraid ? " 
"Oh! no." 

" Now, what would it be that would save you ? Would it 
be the bodily presence of Jesus, which they laid in the sep- 
ulchre and which was as dead and helpless as any other clay 
when the spirit was gone out of it ? No. It would be His 
spiritual presence, would it not ? and His spiritual eyes see- 
ing you, and His spiritual tongue speaking to you ? " 

"Yes." 

" Well, then, this is just the presence that He has prom- 
ised to be with everyone of His people, and now He is here 
and able to do this, and will abide with you and enable you 
to abide in Him if you will just trust Him. Now, just trust 
Him." And the Lord, by His blessed Spirit, did take and 
reveal this truth unto her, and just then and there she did 
leap into the arms of her Saviour and realize that He did 
save her. 

Oh ! friends, some people think we do not make enough of 
Christ. We make all of Christ ; only it is a living Christ 
instead of a dead one. It is Christ in us as well as for us. 
We believe in Christ for us, and we should not have been 
here at all but for Christ for us up there for ever and ever, 
and no one will hasten to throw the crown at His feet readier 
than I shall ; but we believe in order to do it we must have 
Him in us, and if He is not in us, then it is sounding brass 
and tinkling cymbal to call upon Him for us. He must be 
in us. Christ in us as well as for us, and those whom He is 
not in He will not be for. If He dwell not in you, ye are 
reprobates. But Christ in us, — an ever-loving, ever-pres* 



ASSURANCE OF SALVATION. 



73 



ent. Almighty Saviour, is just able to do what the angels 
said He should do, that for which He was called Jesus, to 
save His people from their sin. 

Then how does He do this ? Wherein does he supersede 
the Law ? Wherein does Christ do for me and is made to 
me what the Law could not do ? We have seen what the 
Law could do and how far it could go. Now we see it fails 
just at the vital point of power. Now, how does Christ be- 
come this power to me ? How is He made unto me — not 
for me — up in Heaven (He is there, too), but how is He 
made unto me down here — wisdom, righteousness, sancti lo- 
cation, and redemption ? How does He deliver the people 
from their sins ? How does He save us from the power of 
sin ? Now, you who are longing to get free, try and listen 
to me, and oh ! may the Holy Ghost teach us ! 

He does this first by giving 

Assurance of salvation. He saves and then He makes us 
conscious of the fact, which the Law could not do. All it 
could do was to set us struggling after it. It could not give 
us assurance. Now, by assurance, I mean the personal reali- 
zation of my acceptance in Christ ; my acceptance by the 
Father; my present acceptance — I mean the inward assur- 
ance which men and women find for themselves, or have re- 
vealed in themselves, which they know as a matter of con- 
sciousness. Not that which their minister tells them ; not 
that which they learn from books, not that even which the 
Bible tells them only, for there are thousands of people who 
read the Bible who are not saved, and who know they are 
not. You all know there are thousands of people who be- 
lieve it in vain. 

I was walking down the anxious room at one of Mr, 
Moody's meetings, when two ladies came and said 



74 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



" Will you please speak to us ? " 

I don't know why they came to me, except it was my 
plain dress which made them think I ought to know, even 
if I did not, how to deal with souls. We took three chairs 
and sat down. The youngest was a lady about 30 or 33, and 
very intelligent, evidently an educated person, and the 
elder was an old lady, gorgeously attired. They sat down ; 
and as to the younger one, there was no mistake about her 
earnestness. Mr. Moody had been preaching on "The 
Cities of Kefuge," and showing how the soul who desired to 
to be saved had nothing to do and nothing to suffer, but only 
to run into the Cities of Eefuge and be saved — a beautiful 
sermon for convicted sinners — and this lady said to me, 
almost passionately, — "How is it? there must be some- 
thing wrong somewhere ; there must be a mistake some- 
where. I believe all that Mr. Moody has been saying, every 
word of it. I have believed every word since I was a little 
girl; in fact, I believe the whole of the New Testament — 
all about Jesus Christ, and I believe, moreover, that He 
died for me, and that He makes interrcession for me, and 
yet I'm not saved a bit. I have no more power over sin 
than other people, and I know I am not saved. Now, 
what can be the reason ? I am afraid it is want of faith." 

That is the universal resort to fall back upon by all souls 
in that condition. I said, — " Will you be honest with me ? 
I c is of no use coming to a spiritual doctor any more than 
to a physical doctor if you are not frank ; you would only 
mislead him. If you really want to be saved, be honest 
with me, and I will try, by the help of the Spirit, to help 
you." 

" I do indeed want to be saved, " she said. " I often go 
into my room, and weep and struggle, and pray for hours. 



ASSURANCE OF SALVATION. 



75 



I try to believe. I think I have believed, and I come out 
and I am no better." 

" Oh," I said to myself, " alas ! here is the experience of 
thousands." " Tell me, in these times when you say you 
go into your room, and struggle, and pray, and strive, and 
believe ; tell me, is there anything that comes up before the 
eye of your soul as an obstacle and difficulty that has to be 
put away or embraced ; anything that comes up and that 
the Spirit of God says 6 you must sacrifice this, or cut off 
that, or do the other ? ' Just tell me that." 

She was quiet for a moment and speechless. She waited ; 
then she drew her breath and said — "Well, yes, I am 
afraid there is." 

"Ah!" I said, "that is it; it is not want of faith, it is 
want of obedience. Now you may go on another ten years, 
going into your room, struggling and striving, and until you 
trample that under your feet and say, i Lord, I will follow 
Thee at all costs/ you will not be able to believe. I don't 
want you to tell me what it is ; sufficient that you know it, 
and that the Lord knows it; but, after an experience of 
dealing with hundreds of souls just at this point, I tell you : 
you must give that up or embrace it, whatever it may be ; I 
believe that is the cause of your trouble." 

" Then," she said, " I will make no secret of it. I am 
the only member of an unconverted family that has any 
desire after God. My husband is a worldly, unconverted 
man, and I am in a worldly, unconverted circle, and always 
when I come to the Lord Jesus it comes up before me that 
I will have to confess Him and to live like a Christian, and 
I am not willing to do so." 

" Then, my dear lady, it is the old story over again of the 
young ruler. Now, you know, I should be untrue to your 



76 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



soul if I were to go on plastering you with, untempered 
mortar. There you are, make your choice. You cannot be 
a Christian, and not confess Christ. You cannot be a 
Christian, and not live like one before your unconverted 
relatives, and, therefore, if you are not willing to take up 
the cross and follow Him, you cannot become His disciple." 

Then I went down on my knees with her, and we talked 
and prayed, and, at last, she said, — 

" By the grace of God, I will confess Him." 

Bless the Lord ! and the light of salvation soon gladdened 
her eye, for it shone through her face. She found herself 
able to believe at once, and this is just the condition of 
thousands of souls. She got assurance then. She got saved. 
Before, she had been trying to believe she was saved, when 
she was not — quite a different thing to getting saved and 
then knowing it. People are told to believe this, that, and 
the other. As a gentleman said, at whose house I once 
stayed — 

" I had a curious episode the other morning. I have had 
a gentleman here, of some note in the evangelistic world, for 
two or three days, and he came in the other morning at break- 
fast time and said, ' 1 am happy to tell you that both your 
gardeners are converted/ I was very thankful to hear it ; and 
surprised that the work had been so quickly and thoroughly 
done. Well, I was walking in the grounds, and saw one of 
the gardeners. ' John/ I said, ' I am glad to hear the happy 
news.' He didn't seem to know what I meant. 

" 6 What news, sir ? ' 

" ' Well, I hear you have given your heart to God this 
morning. You are converted, saved ? 9 

"'Well/ John said, 'I could hardly say that, sir.' 

" ' Then what has happened ? Something has happened 
in your experience^- some change taken place ? ' 



ASSURANCE OF SALVATION. 



rr 



" ' Well/ lie said, 6 1 don't hardly know that. The gentle- 
man brought a Bible to me and read two or three verses, and 
asked me if I believed, and talked very nicely to me, and 
asked me again if I believed ; then I said I did, and then he 
said I was all right, but I can't say I feel any different.' " 

Now, I am afraid there has been sadly too much of that. 
There is all the difference between believing the letter of the 
Word and knowing that you are saved. I say, that man 
was not saved — was he ? I say, the lady who spoke to me 
in the anxious room, was not saved — was she ? And I say 
there are, alas ! thousands to-day in just that positson. They 
are not saved. They manifest it by their fruits. They con- 
fess it. They write it to me in their letters on the right 
hand and on the left. Members of churches ten, fifteen, and 
twenty years, some of them ministers of the Gospel, and yet 
they tell me they are not saved ! ! 

Thus, you see it is something more than the belief after 
all. It is something more than what my minister tells me, 
something more than what books tell me, and what the Bi- 
ble tells me. It implies and includes this ; but something 
more than this; yea, very much more. It is believing 
in a living, personal, and almighty Saviour, and believing in 
Him now, and that faith brings the realization. The other 
brings nothing. When people believe thus, the Spirit comes 
into their hearts, crying, " Abba, Father ! " To them there 
is no condemnation. They have the witness of the Spirit 
that they are in Christ Jesus. The Spirit of the Son comes 
into their hearts, crying, " Abba, Father ! " and they know 
by demonstration, by inward consciousness, that they have 
passed from death unto life. You see there is all the differ- 
ence between the means of salvation and salvation itself. 
The means of salvation is not salvation. The means only 



7S 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



brings salvation. "Thy faith, hath saved thee." "By faith 
are ye saved," and when you are saved by faith, then con- 
sciousness attests the fact. Your own spirit attests the fact, 
and God's Spirit attests the fact, and you know it beyond 
controversy. You have assurance, aud this is the first indis- 
pensable condition of power over sin, for while I remain un- 
assured of rny salvation, oh ! what power the devil has over 
me. " Oh," he says, " you're not saved at all. What is the 
good of your standing out on this point, for you are not 
saved at all. You may as well go all the way. You are 
under the power of sin, and may as well remain there. You 
have not got the witness of your salvation, and, therefore, 
what is the use of standing here or there ? " But when 
we have the witness of the Spirit in our souls of our accept- 
ance with God, that he does now for Christ's sake pardon 
and receive us, what power it brings. This is what the old 
divines called assurance of faith, a conviction wrought in 
the soul by the Holy Ghost that Jesus Christ has given Him- 
self for me, that God has accepted that offering in view of 
my sin and transgression, and for its sake, and its sake only, 
has justified me freely from all things by which I could not 
be justified by the Law of Moses, and that in Him God be- 
comes my Father, and now accepts me and looks upon me 
well pleased — a conviction wrought in my soul by the Holy 
Spirit ; for, as the Apostle says, " No man can call Jesus 
< Lord ' but by the Holy Ghost." There must be the spirit- 
ual realization of Him as Lord. Why, anybody can call 
Him "Lord." Tens of thousands of people call Him " Lord " 
now-a-days, whom nobody pretends have the Spirit. What 
did he mean? He must have meant spiritual revelation, 
knowing Jesus Christ as its salvation — its Lord, such as 
He was revealed to Thomas, when he said, "My Lord and 



ASSURANCE OF SALVATION. 



79 



my God ! really knowing him, and to this the Holy Ghost 
alone can testify. Do not tell anybody they are saved. 
I never do. I leave that for the Holy Ghost to do. I tell 
them how to get saved. I try to help them to the way of 
faith. I will bring them up as close as ever I can to the 
blessed broken body of their Lord, and I will try to show 
them how willing He is to receive them, and I know that 
when really they do receive Him the Spirit of God will tell 
them quickly enough they are saved. He will not want any 
assistance about that. I have proved it in hundreds of 
cases. Nobody knows the soul but God. Nobody can see the 
secret windings of the depraved heart but God. Nobody 
can tell when a full surrender is made but God. Nobody can 
tell when the right hand is cut off, or the right eye plucked 
out, but God. Nobody can tell when a soul is whole-hearted 
but God, and as soon as He sees it, He will tell that soul it 
is saved ; but, if God has not told you, be up and doing and 
strive to make your calling and election sure, for you are 
not saved yet, or you would know it. What are you to be- 
lieve unto ? Hope ? Oh, dear no ! you don't believe unto 
hope. Effort ? Oh, no ! you had that before in the Law. 
Salvation ? Yes ! and if you believe unto salvation you 
will get saved, and if you are not saved you have never be- 
lieved unto salvation. Instead of trying to make yourself hap- 
py in this state of uncertainty and misery, for Christ's sake, 
get up and get saved. It is a great deal easier to get saved 
than it is to make yourself believe you are saved when you 
are not. The one is a philosophical impossibility ; the other 
is a glorious possibility at any moment when you get low 
enough before God, and give up all and take His Son as your 
precious and almighty Saviour. God's Gospel is beautifully 
adjusted to the laws of our mental constitution. He who 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



wrote, framed, and conceived it, created us, and He has 
made it like a key to fit the lock, and knows just the condi- 
tions that are necessary, and He has conformed His Gospel 
to those conditions. 

My friend, if you want to know you are saved, this is the 
only response I can give, and the only way I know, and 
I have talked to hundreds of souls of all grades and con- 
ditions, to many ministers of the Gospel, deacons and lead- 
ers, in just this state. For years my labors were exclusively 
carried on in churches and chapels, where, naturally, church 
members have come, and they have told me by hundreds 
with their own lips that they have been members so many 
years and were never saved. Now I am not, therefore, 
speaking without experience in this matter. I tell you 
when you believe in a Scriptural sense, you will get saved 
in a Scriptural sense. When you put out of your head all 
these new-fangled notions about faith, and cease to believe 
in any faith that does not save the soul and bring it into 
conscious union with J esus Christ, and resolve to have it, then 
you will get it. I never knew a soul come to that in my life 
who did not get it. I have had people before me who were 
worn almost to skeletons and were driven almost mad, and 
the first thing they have said has been, when I have asked 
the reason, " Oh ! I have no faith. It is want of faith ! " 
This is the universal lament, and, when we have come to 
close quarters, I have invariably found it has been no such 
thing, but want of OBEDIENCE, which spiritual teachers 
have not had the wisdom to discern as Christ did in the 
heart of the young ruler, "Yet one thing thou lackest." 
He saw that young man's besetting sin was covetousness. 
I do not know that He would have said that to every rich 
man, but in the case of the young ruler He saw that the 



ASSURANCE OF SALVATION. 



81 



love of his possessions was so paramount that unless he let 
them go and made a clean sweep he could not follow Him 
and be a consistent disciple, and so He said, " Sell all, and 
come and follow Me," and the young man went away sorrow- 
ful ; and, mark you, Jesus Christ did not call him back, and 
yet He looked after him and loved him. His great, benevo- 
lent heart panted after him, and He desired to have him ; 
but He saw it would be a greater evil to call him back and 
compromise the conditions of salvation than to let him be 
lost. And yet, methinks, if there was any case in which 
a compromise could be made, it would have been in this. He 
did not do as many would have done in our day — called 
him back and said, " Here, young man, I think I have been 
a little too hard on you. You shall sell half, and keep the 
other half, and come and follow Me." Oh, no ! Everybody 
would be saved at that rate. There would be no test of 
whole-hearted consecration to Him then. If you can let 
people into heaven on terms like these, they would be only 
too ready to close with them. But whether ministers teach 
people the truth or not, the Holy Ghost does ; and He puts 
His finger on the sore spot, and says, " If you want to follow 
me, you will have to renounce this, and give up that, or em- 
brace the other," and if the soul says, "No, Lord; I would 
follow, but surfer me first to go and hug this idol ; " then 
J esus Christ says, " Very well, go ! " That is the sort of 
faith people are resting in. 

I see we shall not get any further than assurance of sal- 
vation. You are panting after it. You are longing for it. 
You may have it. God wants every one of His people to 
have it. Get saved, and you will know it. Use your 
Heavenly Father's letter to find your way up to Him. It is 
not the letter you are to rest in : it is the God who wrote 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



it. Use the letter to get at the Spirit, for the letter will 
not save you — it is the Spirit that saves you. Hug this 
volume to your heart as the expression of your Father's 
will and the record through which you are to believe on His 
Son, but it is the Son who is to save you. People talk 
about exalting Christ. I think this is His glory, that He 
can save His people and make them know it, and make 
them feel it, and carry them as He did Paul and Silas 
through the prison and the stocks, singing His praises and 
making them inexpressibly happy in His love. Assurance 
of Salvation ! Everybody wants it when they come to die. 
Why don't people get it while they live ? Did you ever 
know a professing Christian come to die who did not 
want it ? Did you ever know one dare to die without it ? 
and, if you ever did, you know what a miserable death it 
was. Then, I contend, what is necessary to die with, is 
necessary to live with. Why not get it while you live ? 
Assurance! Assurance! And you can have it just now. 
Hallelujah! Amen. 



SERMON V. 



HOW CHRIST TRANSCENDS THE LAW. 

In answer to letters received since last Sabbath, I would 
just say that the writers tell me that they have been strug- 
gling for years for assurance ; that they do receive the testi- 
mony of God concerning His Son ; that they do believe that 
Jesus Christ died for their sins ; still they have no peace or 
joy. I want you to mark well that assurance of salvation is 
the testimony of God's Spirit to a fact which has transpired, 
and if that fact has not transpired God's Spirit will never 
testify to it. You may think you believe ; but, oh, I feel 
sure numbers of people are deluded here. They think they 
believe because they receive into their minds the written rec- 
ord that God has given of His Son; but they have not be- 
lieved and rested on the promise in such a way as to bring 
the witness of the Spirit. They have stopped short of that. 
They have been satisfied with the letter. 

Now, do not think that I underestimate the letter. 
Perhaps few of you, if any, value this Word more than I do, 
but I have known very few people who have rested merely 
in the letter (and I have known many), who, when I have 
come into close conversation with them, have not been mis- 
erably dissatisfied, unassured, sin-conquered souls ; and that 
fact alone teaches me that there is something wrong. Now, 

83 



84 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



that is not the glorious liberty of the children of God. That 
is not knowing God in the scriptural sense. 

Take God's way, and then the witnessing Spirit will come. 
Of course people are not assured because they have nothing 
to be assured of ! They have no salvation, and, therefore, 
they cannot be assured of it. Get salvation and you will 
get assurance. This is what you want. It is eor you. 
Here it is. There is no other religion recognized in this 
Book. All the saints to whom Paul wrote knew they were 
saved. Here and there was an exception, where they had 
fallen back and got into bondage, as some of you have ; but, 
as a rule, he recognizes the fact that they all were saved, 
were rejoicing in the assurance of it, and this is the normal 
condition of the children of God. I do not say such a person 
may not occasionally slip. He may occasionally. He may 
lose his scroll, as Pilgrim did, but he cannot, will not rest 
till he finds it again ! 

Then you say, "I am not to believe, I suppose." Oh, 
yes ! you are. Take the blessed record to your heart, but 
do not rest in the letter. Go ox until you find the 
substance of things hoped for — the substance. There 
is a substance in spiritual things quite as much as there 
is in natural things, and those who really and truly be- 
lieve, know it. No one can testify when you do really and 
truly believe but God's Spirit, for the things of a man know- 
eth no man save the spirit of a man that is in him, nnd just 
so with the things of God. He searcheth the hearts and minds, 
and knows when you are sincere and real and true ; and when 
you seek Him with all your heart you will find Him, and He 
will come and testify to that fact — and oh ! if you have not 
this testimony, suspect yourself. Do not throw discredit upon 
God. Begin over again and get assurance. 



HOW CHRIST TRANSCENDS THE LAW. 



85 



Oh ! what POWER assurance of salvation gives ! when the 
individual can say I know ; — not merely I believe, but Iknovj. 
Faith is the means to assurance, but assurance is not faith, 
and faith is not assurance. Assurance is the result of faith, 
and when you have the right sort of faith you will have 
assurance, and until you get assurance do not trust yourself. 
Persevere until you get it. God will never leave a sincere 
soul in the dark. You must come down to the foot of the 
cross in the little children's way — give up all for Christ, and 
make up your mind that you will follow Him at all costs, and 
then cast your guilty soul upon His broken, bleeding sacrifice, 
and, as soon as you do this, God will send the answer of His 
Spirit. 

But I want to go a little further in showing how Christ 
supersedes the Law. 

We have noted in a former sermon that He does this, first, 
by giving assurance. 

Secondly, I want to show, by giving POWER OVER SIN. 
Now we shall be safe here. I trust this will not be contro- 
verted ground. I believe He can do a great deal more for His 
people than this, but we will stop here this afternoon. By- 
and-bye we may, perhaps, go further. Christ gives His people 
power over sin. Now, this is a necessity of our position. 
We have, as we have seen, been all slaves of sin. Sin 
is, indeed, the sting of death. Now, how is it if there is no 
deliverance from this dreadful plague and scourge of God's 
people — how is it that the Holy Ghost sets every real child 
of God struggling after it ? Whatever may be a man's theory 
in his creed, you get him on his knees, and he will begin to 
pray to God to save him from sin. Sin is the abominable 
thing which he hates, and longs to be delivered from ; and 
the universal experience of God's people is that the Spirit 



86 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



urges them to seek to he saved from sin. I have heard peo- 
ple argue powerfully against the possibility of being delivered 
from sin, and the next time I have heard them pray, they 
have asked God for the very same thing, and I have said, 
" Thank God, that is the Holy Ghost teaching him now ; he 
cannot help praying for it, whether he believes in it or not." 
If I have been under the power of sin, so as to become its 
complete slave, and Jesus Christ comes and pardons me for 
the past, and delivers me from the guilt and condemnation 
which came upon me in consequence of the past, what do I 
want ? I want some new power. I want something besides 
pardon. I want power, or I shall be down again the next 
minute. 

What God does for us through Jesus Christ outside of us 
is one thing, and what He does in us by Jesus Christ is an- 
other thing, but the two are simultaneous, or one so imme- 
diately succeeds the other that we hardly discern the differ- 
ence. Now, I say, I want power to enable me to meet that 
temptation which is coming on me to-morrow, as it came on 
me yesterday, and, if Jesus Christ pardons ever so, and leaves 
me under the reigning power of my old appetites, what has 
he done for me ? I shall be down in. the mud, and to-morrow 
night I shall be as great a sinner as ever. I want power. I 
want regeneratian — as the Holy Spirit has put it. I want 
the renewing of the spirit of my mind. I want to be created 
anew in Christ Jesus ; " made a new creature." 

Now, this is where Jesus Christ transcends the Law. The 
Law could not renew the spirit of my mind. It could only 
show me what a guilty rebel I was. It could not put a better 
spirit in me. It could not extract the venom, but only show 
it to me, and make me writhe on account of it. But Jesus 
Christ comes and does this for me — gives me power. How ? 



HOW CHRIST TRANSCENDS THE LAW. 



87 



Now, I hope those friends who think that I do not suffi- 
ciently exalt the Saviour, will mark this. How does He give 
it to me ? He unites me to Himself. I am dead to the Law. 
He delivers me from the condemning power of the law when 
He pardons me, and then He does not leave me there, but 
He marries me to Himself. He unites me to another hus- 
band, and then I attain power to bring forth fruit unto God. 
A beautiful — a wonderful figure ! We may not pursue it ; 
but, oh ! what a wonderful figure ! Alone under the Law's 
power, my old husband, I could do nothing but agonize, 
wrestle, and desire. There was no power in me ; but when 
Jesus Christ comes and unites me to Himself, then He gives 
me power to bring forth fruit unto God. It is by the UNION 
OF MY SOUL WITH HIM. You say, "Explain it!" I 
cannot. God Himself cannot explain it We cannot explain 
it, but we know it. As Jesus said to Nicodemus : " The 
wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound 
thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it 
goeth : so is every one that is born of the Spirit." The mys- 
tery is too great to be explained, but there is the beautiful 
illustration, united to Christ I have power to conquer, to sub- 
due, to trample under foot those things which heretofore have 
been my master, and by virtue of Him I retain the power, 
and in no other way. Oh ! dear friends, what a delusion there 
is on the subject of Christian knowledge. If knowledge 
could save people, what a wonderful world we should have 
to-day ! 

Knowledge is as powerless as ignorance. A man is not a 
whit nearer God, or more like Christ, because he has his head 
crammed with this Word. In fact, some I have known who 
have been best acquainted with the Word, have been the 
greatest slaves of sin, and even ministers of Jesus Christ 



88 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



have confessed to me that they have been bond-slaves of some 
besetting sin. It is not in knowledge, and God is raising up 
thousands of witnesses to this fact, that it is not in knowl- 
edge — it is in union with Him, and the little child in intellect 
and intelligence, who has the real vital union with Jesus, 
has more power in his little finger than the most eminent 
theologian has in his whole body without Christ. The things 
of God can only be understood by those who have the Spirit 
of God. The world by wisdom knows not God any more now 
than it did in days of old. The things of the Spirit are only 
spiritually comprehended. Hence this beautiful union can- 
not be explained, but I only know it is spoken of all through 
the Bible, both in the Old Testament and in the New, as 
knowing God. After God has summed up the failures of 
His people, He gives them a promise, and says, " I will be- 
troth thee unto Me in righteousness for ever, and thou shalt 
know the Lord/' as though that were the end of the whole 
matter, coming really and truly to know Him. When they 
come to that living union of soul with Him, it brings the vital 
sap like the branch of the tree— another of his own beautiful 
illustrations. "Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch 
cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine ; no 
more can ye, except ye abide in me/' You know what the 
branch is when it is broken off. It is a branch. It retains 
the form of a branch, and, for a while, the beauty and green- 
ness of a branch, but it is broken off. There is no power in 
it. Suppose it could maintain that form. Alas ! human 
branches often do, and maintain those green leaves fragrant 
in beauty, as it was when it was first lopped off. It can never 
bear fruit. Why ? Because the communication is cut be- 
tween itself and the vine, and there is no sap in the fibre. 
It is cut off. Xow, my friends, you can see why a soul who 



HOW CHRIST TRANSCENDS THE LAW. 



89 



has never been truly united to Christ in this living, spiritual 
marriage, cannot bear fruit unto God. 

You can be like a branch. You can get so much scriptural 
knowledge that you can look just like a real Christian. Alas ! 
You can get many of the feelings of a Christian, and of the 
sentiments, as well as a great many of the aspirations and 
desires of a Christian. You may be so like a branch that 
nobody but Jesus Christ may know you are not in that true 
Vine, and yet you have never, as the Apostle says, been 
grafted on to the olive tree. And therefore, you go on weep- 
ing, and struggling, and trying to perform the function of a 
living branch, when all the while you are a dead one. You 
go on trying to bring forth fruit unto God when the one in- 
pispensible condition of f ruitfulness is wanting. You have 
got every other condition. You may even be nailed up to 
the wall close to the vine. You may be such a professor that 
nobody may ever doubt you. You may be so close to the vine 
than nobody can detect your want of union but the gardener 
who comes and closely inspects you, and yet you may not 
have one fibre circulating the real spiritual sap. HENCE 
YOU HAVE NO POWER, and down you go when the 
temptation comes. Ah ! what weary years of strife some 
professing Christians have ! they would be ashamed to tell, 
only death forces it from their lips before they die — trying 
to perform the functions of living men when when they have 
never been spiritually made alive. All they have ever had 
has been what Paul depicts as the struggle of a poor convict- 
ed sinner unable to bring forth any fruit unto God. 

Now, you say this union with Him — what is it ? Well, 
I cannot explain it. You, who know what it is, cannot ex- 
plain it : so to know the Lord as to be conscious of the liv- 
ing sap circulating through your soul, anointing your eyes 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



with eye-salve, giving you eyes to see, a voice to speak, feet 
to run, and hands to serve — making you in all a "new creature." 

Now my dear friends, those of you who have not got this, 
never mind who comes to you and brings a Bible, and says, 
"Do you believe this and that, and if you do you are saved." 
Say " Miserable comforters are ye all : I will never be content 
until I know God." 

I made up my mind to this when I was 15 years of age. I 
had had the strivings of God's Spirit all my life, since I was 
about two years old. My dear mother has often told me how 
she went up stairs to find me crying, and when she questioned 
me, I said I was crying because I had sinned against God. 
Thank the Lord, I do not say this boastingly. I have good 
cause to be ashamed that I was so long before I fully gave 
myself up : but all through my childhood I was graciously 
sheltered by a watchful mother from outward sin, and, in 
fact, brought up as a Christian. When I came to be between 
15 and 16, when I believe, I was thoroughly converted, the 
great temptation of Satan to me was this : " You must not 
expect such a change as you read of in books. You have been 
half a Christian all your life. You always feared God. 
You must content yourself with this." Oh! how I was 
frightened ! It must have been the Spirit of God that taught 
me. I was frightened at it, I said, "No, no." My heart 
is as bad as other people's, and if I have not sinned outwardly 
I have inwardly. I cried to God to show me the evil of my 
heart, and said, " I will never rest till I am thoroughly and 
truly changed, and know it, as any thief, or any great out- 
ward sinner." I went on seeking God in this way for six 
weeks, often till two o'clock in the morning, wrestling, and 
I told the Lord I would never give up, if I died in the search, 
until I found God, and I did find him, as every soul does, 



HOW CHRIST TRANSCENDS THE LAW. 



91 



when it comes to him in that way. I cried for nothing on 
earth or in heaven, but that I might find Him whom my soul 
panted after, and I did find Him, and you can find Him. I 
knew Him. I can't tell how, but I knew Him. I knew He 
was well pleased with me. I knew that we held sweet con- 
verse often to the small hours of the morning together, and 
I know that I was as happy in His love, and far more happy 
than I ever was in any human love before or since. 

Now, friends, you can all have this union. He is no respec- 
ter of persons. He has bought it for us. He saw our weak- 
ness. He contemplated our moral inability. He need not 
have come if we could have known God by the Law. If the 
old covenant had been perfect, there would have been no 
room for a second. It brought us not into the full realiza- 
tion and enjoyment of God, but the new covenant does. It 
cleanses the conscience from dead works to serve the living 
God, and God is henceforth revealed to his people, and they 
walk with Him. " If any man will do His will, I will come 
to him, and make My abode with him and My Father," and 
when a man has got the Father and Son, he is a match for 
satan and all his forces. Union with Christ ! 

Oh ! do you think this is a mere allegory of the Apostle's ? 
It is a beautiful illustration. When he delivers us from the 
condemning, reigning power of the Law, we become married 
to Jesus Christ. Then we get a power to produce in our 
affections, and hearts, and lives, and all about us — such 
things as God delights in. 

Now, mark, all through the New Testament, and, indeed, 
the Bible, no truth is taught with greater force and frequency 
than this, that without a vital union of soul with Christ, all 
ceremonies, creeds, beliefs, professions, church ordinances, 
are sounding brass and tinkling cymbals, and all who trust 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



in them will be deceived. This is the very essence of the 
Gospel. This is what He came for, and all (and, oh ! how 
my heart bleeds to think and say it) who do not attain to this 
real vital union with Him will be lost. Everything else 
falls short of our need and the purpose and end of the Gos- 
pel of Christ. 

He came on purpose for us to have this union with Him- 
self. Circumcision, nor uncircumcision, nor anything else 
availeth anything but this faith, which worketh by love and 
brings the Spirit of Christ into our hearts. Oh ! bear with 
me ! Dear friends, have you got it ? Have you got this vital 
union with Christ ? Are you bringing forth fruit unto God ? 
If not, I beseech you give up daubing yourselves with untem- 
pered mortar and trying to make yourself believe you are 
right when you are all wrong. However much desire, pur- 
pose, hope, aspiration, struggle, or whatever else you have, 
if you have not attained to this, you are not saved yet, and 
you are not in the kingdom. 

In conclusion, bring forth fruit unto God, or, as the Apos- 
tle has it, " having your fruit unto holiness and the end eter- 
nal life " — and in another place, for the " end of the com- 
mandment, the purpose of the commandment, the ultimatum 
of the commandment is, charity, love out a pure heart," and 
so in many other passages ; but we just take these at random. 

The result ! What is the result ? That we may bring 
forth fruit unto God. Jesus Christ in this union recognizes 
the fact that we are still in the body ; still in the world ; and 
that we are open to the attacks of Satan. He knows — has 
foreseen, and has provided for the temptations of the flesh — 
that is, the temptations which come to us through our natur- 
al appetites, and instincts, and desires, as they came to Him. 
He was hungry, and after enduring the great temptation in 



HOW CHRIST TRANSCENDS THE LAW. 



93, 



the. wilderness. There was no sin in being hungry. He 
was intensely hungry, for He had nerves, and a brain, 
and a heart, as we have. He was a perfect man, and He 
suffered all the consequences of that lengthened strain 
upon His nervous system, and the Devil took advantage of 
the existence of that intensely excited condition of His body 
by tempting Him unlawfully to gratify it. For he said, 
" Command these stones that they be made bread." This 
was unlawful under the circumstances (we will not stop to ex- 
plain why), and, therefore, He said, "Get thee behind me, 
Satan." He would rather suffer the hunger than unlawfully 
gratify it, and therefore, He did not commit sin. It matters 
not (and this will meet the case of some who have written to 
me) how intensely excited any physical appetite may be — 
that is not sin. The more you suffer through excitement of 
the physical appetite, whatever kind it may be, the more 
Jesus Christ sympathizes with you, for He was tempted in 
all points, like as we are, yet without sin, and if you en- 
dure unto blood He will sympathize with you more than with 
the man who does not have to endure and resist. You do 
not sin because of the appetite merely being excited. I think 
Satan gets some sincere souls to bring themselves into con- 
demnation when God does not condemn them. If you 
resist as Pie did ; if you say, " Get thee behind me, Satan," 
you sin not. What was Eve's sin ? Unlawful self -gratifi- 
cation. The Devil might have tempted her until now, if she 
had lived so long ; if she steadily resisted him she would not 
have brought sin into the world. 

Under the law it is sin, and you struggle against it, but 
you have no power and down you go. United to Christ you 
see it is sin, and you have power, and you resist it, and 
the Devil runs away, and that is the difference. You are 



94 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



married to a new husband now, and lie is more than a match 
for the old Devil. He is a conquered foe, while you abide 
in Christ. He can torment, harass, and excite you, stimulate 
your natural appetites, but he cannot make you sin while you 
abide in Christ. " Little children, keep yourselves from idols." 

Then, again, we are open to the temptations of the world, 
but this is provided for. Jesus Christ knows that we are 
susceptible to the liking of nice things like other people, and 
great things, and ambitious schemes, and the world's praises 
and censures. God's people are only sadly too familiar with 
this, and the weak part of their nature would respond to it, 
and they would fall, but now they are united to Christ, He 
opens their eyes to see that it is Satan and the world. When 
the Devil takes them to the top of the pinnacle, and shows 
them all the glory of the world, he tries to make them think 
it would be very nice to have it ; he tempts them to think it 
hard that they should be regarded as such paltry and mean 
people because they belong to Christ ; but when they are 
throughly and truly united to Jesus, He gives them power 
to say as He did, " Get thee behind me, Satan," for it is writ- 
ten, " Thou shalt love the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt 
thou serve" — not Him and the world. Oh! thank God, if 
you have got there. Praise the Lord if you understand that. 

Then he comes not only through these avenues ; but he 
comes again with direct, subtle, spiritual influence, with his 
old insinuation, as he came to Eve, and says, " Hath God said 
this and that ? " He tries to inject doubts as to God's good- 
ness and veracity into the believer's soul, as he used to do 
under the Law, and under the Law the convicted sinner's soul 
used to swell with rebellion, and say, " Yes, it is a hard case." 

Satan comes and vomits these thoughts, and tries to 
excite these. ill feelings and these chargings of God foolishly 



HOW CHRIST TRANSCENDS THE LAW. 



95 



in the believer's soul, but by virtue of his union with Christ, 
who came not to do His own will, but His Father's, and who 
spoke only the things that his Father bade Him, the believ- 
er says, " Though He slay me yet will I trust Him, and shall 
not the Judge of all the earth do right ? " and the Devil is 
gone. And then when the Devil is foiled at all these points, 
he tries higher ground. " Eeally you are a wonderful Chris- 
tian — you are. You have had special grace, for surely very 
few people can have resisted the amount of temptation that 
you have. Eeally you must be one of God's specially favour- 
ed ones. Now cast yourself down. It is written, 6 He shall 
give His angels charge concerning you.' " Spiritual presump- 
tion next. When he is foiled through the world, and the 
flesh, and. the Devil, and then he doffs his old robe and comes 
as an angel of light. But the soul's Bridegroom is hard by, 
and he says, " Be not ignorant of Satan's devices. Behold 
I am thy salvation. Trust, and be not afraid." And so the 
soul refuses to cast itself into unnecessary troubles, and is 
content to abide in and walk with its Lord. That is how 
He gives us the victory. He shows us Satan's devices, and 
gives us power. I cannot tell you how. We don't know 
how. We only know He gives it to us, and we only know 
that one instant separated from Him we fall and become as 
other men. We only know that in those seasons when our 
faith has relaxed its grip we have gone down in the mud and 
been overcome as others. It is by faith we stand, and while, 
like Peter, we keep our eye on Him, and hold Him fast, the 
waves may roar, and the winds may howl, but He holds us 
by virtue of this union, and we bring forth fruit unto God. 
We have power over the Devil. He said, " I will give you 
power over all the power of the enemy, and I will make you 
conquerors." This is the deliverance of the saints. This 



96 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



is the life of the saints. This is the fight of faith. This is 

the SORT OF RELIGIOX THAT DOES TO DIE WITH ! ! ! 

People all over the land are astounded at our poor, weak, 
illiterate Salvation Army soldiers. A gentleman in a meet- 
ing on Easter Monday, a leading man of thought and expe- 
rience in the holiness world, who was there all day — when 
my daughter said, " Why don't you speak ? " said, " One feels 
as if one can't speak in these meetings." " Why ? " These 
people have such unction from the Holy One that they are 
wiser than their teachers. Another gentleman, of consider- 
able position, too, in the religious world, said, " I feel like 
getting down at their feet. I feel as if they could teach me." 
How is it that they have such power — those babes in intel- 
lect and intelligence ? All over the land people say this to 
me. People who talk and go ahead in other meetings, when 
they get into our meetings, say " I can't. They are so far 
ahead of me that, to tell you the truth, I have nothing to 
say." I say, the Lord have mercy upon you, and make haste 
and come up after them. Only get down from your high 
mightiness as low as these people, and you will get it. It is 
not because they are poor and illiterate that they have power, 
but because they are babes in spirit. Even as Christ said, 
" I thank thee, oh ! Father, that Thou hast hid these things 
from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto 
babes." The simple spirit, the teachable believing soul — oh ! 
how much more it learns of God, in one hour's precious com- 
munion, than Doctors of Divinity learn in weeks of close 
study, who have not got it, because it is the SPIEIT that 
teaches the things of God. This is union with Jesus that 
bringeth forth fruit unto God, and oh ! the wondeiful things 
it enables us to bring forth. If you would all follow me, as 
far as I have gone this afternoon, and make the resolution I 



HOW CHRIST TRANSCENDS THE LAW. 



made at 15 years of age, not to be put off with theories, but 
that you will know the Lord, that you will have this Divine 
union, and that you will never rest till you get it and 
know you have it. If we could all get thus far saved, 
what happiness there would be amongst you. There would 
be some Hallelujahs. Many of you would be surprised how 
you would find your tongues. A gentleman once said to me, 
" I never did shout in my life, but upon my word I couldn't 
help it." I said, "Amen. It's time, then, you began." 1 
hope it may be the same with many of you. When the Lord 
comes to His Temple and fills it with His glory you won't 
know what to do. You must find vent somewhere, or you 
will be as the poor old negro said he was — " Eeady to bust 
his waistcoat." We feel so about temporal things. People 
drop down dead with joy. People shriek with grief. Peo- 
ple's hearts stand still with wonder at the news they have 
heard, perhaps from some prodigal boy. I heard of a mother, 
not long ago, whom some one injudiciously told of the sudden 
return of her son, who dropped down dead and never spoke. 
And when the Master comes to His Temple, that glorious 
blessed Holy Saviour, whom you profess to so long after and 
to love, and who has been absent so many years, and whom 
you have been seeking after with strong crying and tears, 
comes, do you think it will be too much to shout your song, 
or go on your face, or do any extravagant thing ? Oh ! no, 
if there is reality, you cannot help yourself. The manifest- 
ation will be according to your nature One will fall down 
and weep in quietness, and the other will get up and shout 
and jump. You cannot help it. Like the two martyrs, one 
rejoiced in the realization of God's presence, and the other, 
who was in darkness, yet did not deny his Lord and turn his 
back upon Him. He continued in the way of obedience, and 



98 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



the other was encouraging him to hope and believe the Mas- 
ter would come ; but He did not come until they started from 
the dungeon to the stake ; so they fixed upon a sign, and 
the one said to the other, " If He comes you will give me the 
sign on the road." The Master did come, but the martyr 
could not confine himself to the sign. He shouted, raising 
his arms to his fellow martyr, " He's come, He's come, He's 
come ! " He couldn't help it. When He comes you won't 
be ashamed who know it. When you really get a living 
Christ for your husband you will be more proud than the 
bride is who has got a husband worth being proud of, and 
you will love to acknowledge and praise Him, and the day 
is coming when you will crown Him before all the host of 
heaven. The Lord help you to accept Him, and put away 
everything that hinders His coming. Amen. 



SERMON VI. 



THE FRUITS OF UNION WITH CHRIST. 

" That the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not 
after the flesh, hut after the Spirit." — Rom. viii. 1-4* 

We dealt, on Sunday week, with " What the Law could 
not do ; " and last Sabbath afternoon we dealt with " What 
Jesus Christ could do," by uniting us with Himself and 
giving us power. I want, this afternoon, to direct your 
attention to the fruits of this union — the law fulfilled 
in us. What does it mean? 

First. — I want just to say two or three words about Law 
in the abstract. There seems to me to be an awful miscon- 
ception of the Apostle's writings respecting the Law, caused 
by "wresting" and misapplying what he says on justification 
by faith. People should bear in mind that much of this 
Epistle, and some others, was written on purpose to meet 
the extreme legal notions of the Jews, who had no other 
idea of righteousness than that of their own efforts to keep 
the Law (Romans ix. 3), and that, therefore, the Apostle 
was bound, as any other writer would be in such circum- 
stances, to put the extreme view on the other side. Many, 
not considering this, separate these passages from their 
explanatory connections, and from all the rest of the Word 
of God, and preach now-a-days that we have nothing to do 
with the Law. Hence, there has come to be a spirit of An- 

99 



100 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



tinornianism abroad in the land, compared with which the 
Antinomianism of bygone ages was innoeency itself. God 
helping me, I shall never cease to lift up my voice against it. 

'Now, please, first note that there is, in this writing, talk- 
ing, and singing about the Law, a great deal of mental fog 
and confusion. People should be very careful, when they 
come to such matters as these, to be clear in their own minds 
as to what the Apostle is writing about ; but I find frequent- 
ly in such writings and songs a total misapprehension as to 
the meaning of the Apostle, and a total confounding of the 
Moral with the Ceremonial Law. Now, always mind, when 
you read anything about the Law, to examine and find out 
which Law is meant, whether it is the great Moral Law, 
which never has been, and never can be, abrogated, or the 
Ceremonial Law, which, in Christ, certainly was done away. 
Mind which, because your salvation may depend upon that 
point. If you make a mistake there you may be lost through 
it ; therefore be very careful. Now, I say that people con- 
found this, and, consequently, there is a perfect hodge-podge 
of theology in this day, which I defy anybody to understand. 
People do not know what they are to believe, or what they 
are not to believe. As a gentleman said, not long ago, "it is 
confusion confounded. I go to one meeting and hear this, 
and then I go to another meeting and hear that, and, very 
often in the very same meeting, the speakers will get up and 
flatly contradict each other !" " Exactly," I said, "but you 
have got the Bible. Why don't you study that for yourself ? 
Why not use common sense — why not let your conscience 
speak ? " "But," said he, "why do not our ministers do it ? " 
"Because," said I, "many of them do not know it them- 
selves. Let your conscience speak, and God will not let you 
go wrong." It is an honest heart people want, and then 



THE FRUITS OF UNION WITH CHRIST. 



101 



they will get the light. People sing about the Law, talk 
about the Law, and glory in being free from the Law, in a 
lawless, Antinomian spirit, as far from anything Paul ever 
wrote or meant as hell is from heaven ! Oh, it is an awfully 
bad sign when people are out of love with the Law of God ! 
David made his boast in the Law of his God, he meditated 
on it by day and by night, and its precepts were his delight ; 
he loved it with all his soul, and so did David's Son, and he 
is too much in love with his Father's Law and Will, to hold 
fellowship with anybody who does not love it. As He said 
to the Jews, "He that is of God, heareth God's words; ye, 
therefore, hear them not, because ye are not of God ; " and, 
again, of His disciples, "'For I have given unto them the 
words which Thou gavest me." So, mind, if you do not love 
the words, the expression of the will of God, you do not love 
God, and if you do not love the Father neither do you love 
the Son. This is the very accusation which He brought 
against the Jews, that they had made void His Father's 
Law. Let us mind, then, the distinction always made be- 
tween the great Moral and the Ceremonial Law. 

In the second place : I want you to note, that when you 
have ascertained that the Apostle is speaking of the Moral 
Law — and he appears to speak disparagingly of it — he is al- 
ways referring to its inability to justify a sinner, or to pro- 
duce spiritual life. This, he says, it could not do ; but he 
never speaks disparagingly of it as the guide and standard of 
spiritual life after it is given. No ! he goes back to it as the 
only standard, and so did Jesus Christ. They continually 
refer to the Law as the highest expression of the holiness 
and righteousness of God, and as the standard by which we 
are to set our souls and consciences. What other standard 
have we but the Law ? How am I to judge of my thoughts, 



102 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



words, and actions, but by the Law? Where has Jesus 
Christ given me any other guage ? And if people would but 
read on, and let the Apostle explain himself, they would un- 
derstand him better, and not get into such tanglements and 
mazes ! Paul is most careful to guard himself against the 
Antinomian conclusions which he saw might be drawn from 
isolated parts of his writings. He says, " Do we, then, make 
void the Law through faith ? nay, we establish the Law." 

And, again, " Wherefore the Law is holy, and the com- 
mandment holy, just, and good ; " and, again, when he says, 
that " To them that are without Law he became as without 
Law ; n he guards himself by a parenthesis, " Being not with- 
out Law to God, but under the Law to Christ." That is, 
under the great universal Law of love, which fulfils all other 
law ; for " Love is the fulfilling of the Law." Love is the 
very spirit and essence of the Law. The Law is to me the 
highest expression of what I ought to be, in my relations to 
my Creator and in my relations to my fellow creatures. 
Now, can what ought to be ever be abrogated ? Does it 
stand to sense ? Can the rightness of things ever be altered ? 
Can God ever make two and two five, and can God make 
evil good and good evil ? He can make an evil person good, 
by saving him from the evil and making him good ; but God 
cannot make evil itself good, and good evil, and He never 
professes to do it. 

Oh, this confounding of things ! how it does ruin and be- 
fog poor souls ! How can it ever be less the duty of the 
creature to love and serve the Creator than it was when he 
first came pure and spotless from His hand ? How can it 
ever be less my duty to love my neighbour as myself than it 
was at the beginning, or how can I satisfy my conscience 
with less than loving all men with a pure, benevolent love, 



THE FRUITS OF UNION WITH CHRIST. 



103 



such, as God bears to them in my measure, and according to 
my capacity ? The same standard remains, and the differ- 
ence between God's scheme of salvation and the scheme of 
salvation so (almost) universally preached now, is that 
man's scheme proposes to get me into heaven without fulfil- 
ling this Law, while God's scheme proposes to give me 
power to FULFIL IT. Alas ! I am afraid many will not 
find out which is the right one till they get to the Judgment 
Seat and find it is too late ! 

Now, I say, that there is not a word, rightly understood 
and interpreted by correlative Scriptures, in the whole New 
Testament that disparages or sets aside the Law of God — 
not a word ! Do you think the Apostle was as unphilosopli- 
ical as many now-a-days ? Did he not know what he wrote ? 
Is he not as clear as a bell ? And now he comes to the 
climax of his argument, the great end and purpose towards 
which he has been advancing in his preceding reasonings : 

" That the righteousness of the Law might he fulfilled 
in us." As though he had said, " This great and glorious 
end which was lost in Adam shall be re-found and restored." 
So the old serpent shall be circumvented at last, and God's 
people shall be able to fulfil this beautiful ideal of rectitude 
and righteousness which God has planned for man — Jesus 
Christ shall destroy the work of the devil, restore man, and 
enable him to walk in the light even as He is in the light. 
What the Law tried to do by a constraining power from 
without, the Gospel does by an inspiring power from within. 
That is the difference. I could not keep it in the letter, but, 
united to my heavenly Bridegroom, I can keep it in the 
Spirit. He fills me with His love, and this enables me to 
keep the Law, for love is the fulfilling of the Law. " Love 
worketh no ill to his neighbour" of any kind, and, again, the 



104 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



great Teacher said, "For all the Law is fulfilled in one word 
— Thou shall love thy neighbour as thyself." If you do 
that, will you injure your neighbour ? See how the spirit 
fulfills the Law ! If you love your neighbour, will you mis- 
represent him, cheat him, envy him anything that he pos- 
sesses or enjoys ? " No," you say, "of course not; it is a 
contradiction." Very well, then, get this love in your soul 
and you will fulfil the Law. Love is the fulfilling of the 
Law, and he that loveth in this sense dwelleth in God and 
God in him. Love is the fulfilling of the Law, and the 
great glory of the Gospel of Christ is that it brings us back 
to love His Law, and, as the angels delight in it, and, as all 
holy intelligences delight in it, so we delight in it ; and the 
righteousness of the Law — high, deep, and broad, and long 
as it is — shall be fulfilled in us, "who walk not after the 
flesh, but after the Spirit." 

Then, I say, the Apostle evidently considered this fulfil- 
ment of the Law of Kighteousness in us as the highest end 
of our existence and of redemption : for, he says, it is all to 
be, that the righteousness of the Law may be fulfilled in us. 
Mark, not that its claims shall be abated. Oh ! not one jot 
or tittle shall ever be abated. They cannot. God could not 
abate them. Not that the righteousness of the Law shall 
cease to have a claim upon you. Oh ! if He could have saved 
us like that, Christ need not have come at all. He could 
have saved us without a Mediator. ]STo, no ! but that the 
righteousness of the Law may be fulfilled in us as it was 
in Him. That we should be brought to the full stature of 
men and women in Christ Jesus, that we should have this 
spirit of our heavenly Bridegroom, by which we fulfil the 
Law, and the servant, in his measure, shall be as his Lord. 

How ? As I explained, last Sunday, first : We shall be 



THE FRUITS OF UNION WITH CHRIST. 



105 



delivered from the reigning, condemning power of the Law 
by virtue of an infinite, vicarious sacrifice punished in our 
stead, and then, married to Him, we shall serve in the new- 
ness of the spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter. 

I want to be eminently and intensely practical, for the 
sake of the hungering and thirsting souls who are asking me 
in their letters, " Tell me how ? Help me ? " 

Just let us look at this result (in fourth verse). People 
talk about glorifying Christ ; but, it seems to me, this does 
glorify Him. It seems to me here is something to glory in, 
that He has circumvented the old serpent and snatched the 
prey from his teeth, and restored it, and enabled man, after 
all, to fulfil the righteousness of God. Not only in what 
Christ does for us ; but what He does in us, that God should 
look on you and say, "I am well pleased. There is nothing 
there contrary to my will." He will give you the testimony, 
as He did Enoch, that your ways please Him, that your 
thoughts please Him, that your motives, and purposes, and 
desires, and actions please Him. That is what the Gos- 
pel proposes to do. We have seen how this spirit is pro- 
duced. Now let us look at the fruits, and first 

This fruit is brought forth in THE AFFECTIONS ! 

Those people who are thus united to Christ fulfil the Law 
in their affections. You know it is commonly said, that if 
you get hold of the affections of a man or a woman you get 
hold of him or her. So you do. This is the touchstone, 
and there is nothing in which I have been so grieved and 
disappointed as in the manifest want of quickness, livingness 
in the affections of God's people for Him. Oh ! how I have 
seen this come out. The coldness, the unsympathetic cha- 
racter of a great many people's religion, and yet people 
whom one would not like to unchristianize. I cannot ex- 



106 



AGGEESSIVE CHKISTIAXITY. 



plain it by any better term than want of quickness. I have 
often been struck with the difference when you touch indi- 
viduals on some point that affects them personally and on 
those which relate to the Kingdom of God, and have been 
tempted to say with the Apostle : " All men seek their own, 
and not the things that are Jesus Christ's." You talk with 
a lady about the salvation of her children's souls, the souls 
of her neighbors, and her servants, or about the cause of God 
in general, and she will talk "good" with you, so to speak, 
and you will feel, yes, it is all very well, but it doesn't seem 
to come up from the depths. It seems to come from the 
throat, so to speak ; a sort of superficial, surface kind of 
thing. But, if a child is dangerously ill, how quick the 
mother's sympathies, how ready to listen, how willing to do 
anything that you suggest to help the child. If the business 
is in danger, if a man has got into difficulties and you can 
suggest any plan by which he may get out of them, how 
quickly his attention is aroused. His interest doesn't flag, 
because the subject touches him to the quick. It is his con- 
cern, and just so in many other things. God forbid I should 
judge all Christians. No, no, no ! — there are many blessed 
exceptions. There are many like David — rivers of water 
do run down their eyes ; but I am speaking of the mass of 
professors. I am afraid that in their affections there is a 
great deal of this lukewarm superficiality. Why is it ? Be- 
cause such people do not abide in Christ, if ever they were 
in Him. They do not keep the freshness and the quickness 
of the Spirit of Jesus. They do not give themselves time 
to do it for one thing, or care about it for another. We want 
the constant indwelling of the Holy Spirit to quicken our 
spiritual perceptions and keep us awake. It is Satan's great 
desire to rock us to sleep, and there is no quality in which 



THE FRUITS OF UNION WITH CHRIST. 



107 



the disciples have been more conspicuous than in going to 
sleep since the time when the professed watchers went to 
sleep in the garden ; but Jesus, in his mercy and love, is al- 
ways wakening them. But, oh! this disposition to go to 
sleep, to lose our quickness of perception. Now, friends, what 
must you do ? You must do as you did at first. Cry and 
believe till your soul is filled with the love of God. 

I shall never forget reading, when only fourteen years of 
age, a sentiment of a precious and valiant soldier of the Lord 
Jesus, who is now in glory. Speaking of putting a test, he 
said that people might easily find out whether they loved 
God or themselves best : " Suppose you were in business in 
a little village and were doing pretty well, and everything 
was going smoothly with you ; but there was nothing for you 
to do there for the Kingdom of God, no particular way in 
which you could serve or glorify God ; and suppose there 
was another little village hard by, where there was nothing 
whatever doing for the Kingdom, and you felt it laid upon 
your soul to go there in order that you might preach to un- 
converted people and raise a church, and do something for 
souls. Ah ! but you have got a nice business and you don't 
know whether you would prosper or not in the other village. 
Now you may know whether you are serving God or yourself 
first, by this test. If you are seeking God, you will be ready 
to go to that strange village and trust Him with the conse- 
quences ; but, if you are serving yourself, you will stop where 
you are. The Lord has helped me to apply that many a 
time to many things beside business, and to keep the King- 
dom of God first, as I made up my mind it should be first 
always — not in time merely, but in degree — all the way 
through. If I love Him best, I shall feel for Him deepest, 
and shall act for Him first. If I love Him best, I shall feel 



108 AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 

for Him more deeply than for my husband or children, near 
and precious as they are, and dearer than my own life a thou- 
sand times ; but He will be dearer still and His interests ; 
and if, as Jesus Christ says, His interests require me to sac- 
rifice these precious and beloved ones of my soul, then I shall 
sacrifice them ; for the philosophical reason that I love Him 
better than I love them, and, therefore, I shall lay them on 
His altar to promote His glory. If I understand it, this is 
the fruit of the Spirit in the affections — God first. I am 
afraid, in a great many instances, it is husband first, wife 
first, children first, and, I am afraid, in some cases, business 
first, and then God may take what there is left, and be thank- 
ful for that ! Now, anybody in this condition need not ex- 
pect joy, peace, power. You will never get it, if you do. 
God will have to make you over again before you can get it, 
and to alter the conditions of His salvation. Oh ! but if 
you will lay it all down, that is quite another thing. 

As I said to a lady, a little time ago, " The Lord can take your 
husband, if you refuse to give him to Him ; v and I am afraid 
God's people often compel Him to take their darlings, because 
they make them idols ; whereas, if they had laid them on 
His altar, they might have them back, as Abraham received 
back Isaac. I said to a gentleman, " Mind, God does not 
burn down your barns, wreck your ships, and take away your 
riches. God loves your soul enough to do it, if you let these 
things prevent that whole-hearted consecration which He re- 
quires." We are in His hands. "Whom He loveth He 
chasteneth," and if you want to keep the precious things you 
have, oh ! put them at His feet, and hold them in subordin- 
ation to Him. First, in your affections ! He is a jealous God, 
and jealousy in God is very much like jealousy in us. It is 
the same characteristic of mind, only purified from selfish- 



THE FRUITS OP UNION WITH CHRIST. 



109 



ness. He is a jealous God, and if you will love these things 
better than Him, and if you will not give Him your affections, 
then He will chstise you, or, what is worse still, He will take 
His Holy Spirit from you. 

Fruit in your affections. Oh, if Christ had your affections, 
how it would operate in everything ! The wife would not 
be always grumbling because the husband had to go out three 
or four evenings a week on the Lord's errands — only let them 
be the Lord's errands. The husband would not grudge to 
give his wife up to go to help to win souls, because it de- 
prived him of her society or a few comforts that she might 
provide for him if she were near. The parents would not 
grudge to restrain their children as Eli did. He did not re- 
strain them from that which they liked, and you know the 
fruit it brought. Parents who love God best will not allow 
their children to learn anything which could not be pressed 
into the service of God. They do not allow them to run with 
the giddy multitude, to dance or do anything the devil might 
inspire them to desire. "No ! " they will say, "my children 
belong to God, and I am going to train them for God and 
God only." Bless the Lord, He helped me to make up my 
mind to do that before I became a mother ; and he has helped 
me to keep that promise (though I have not been as faithful 
to it as I ought), casting aside resolutely every temptation 
to the contrary. And now He is giving me the fruit of my 
self-denial in the souls and labors of my precious children. 
One after another, as they grow up, they take their natural 
place in the temple of the Lord, and I believe they shall 
go out no more forever. Oh, that parents would do it! 
Parents might save their children. I know what a mother's 
feelings are. I know the temptation there is to see them shine 
in competition with others, and to excel others. I know it 



110 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



all; but I said, "Iso; 'Get thee behind me, Satan.' 99 I will 
keep them for God ; and He has enabled me to keep them 
for Him. Bless His holy name ! 

I loved Him better than I loved them, and, much as I 
loved them (and those who know me know I do love them), 
I would see them in a row laid in their coffins before I would 
sacrifice His interests and lose their souls. Do you love Him 
best ? Test yourself. Do you love Him more than all else ? 
Are you holding everything in subordination to Him ? 

Further, this fruit will come out in our members — our 
bodies ; and oh, there is a deep spiritual meaning which, I 
trust, many of you know, in those words of the Apostle, " For 
the body is dead because of sin ; but He hath quickened even 
your mortal bodies by His Spirit, which dwelleth in you." 
It is killed to the Devil, as well as to sin, and all the uses 
of Satan ; but it is quickened by the Spirit for the use of God 
so that you can render not only the calves of your lips, but 
your hands, and eyes, and brain, and heart, and feet, and the 
whole of your body to Him — your members instruments of 
righteousness unto God. Hence, such a person will not feel 
their eyes are their own, to rove at random wherever they 
list. Such a person will not feel his tongue is his own, to 
speak as he pleases. He will " bridle it," as James says, 
when tempted to speak unadvisedly. Such a person will not 
feel that his hands are his own, to waste the time, in which 
he ought to be doing something for God. Such a person will 
not feel that his feet are his own, to carry him where he lists, 
but where his Master would have him go — his whole body 
consecrated, and, especially his tongue — consecrated to God, 
to testify for Him. He will feel that he must feed his body, 
as my husband often says, on the same principle that a man 
feeds his horse — to keep it in the best working condition for 



THE FRUITS OF UNION WITH CHRIST. 



Ill 



God — never eating anything that will bring the devils of 
dyspepsia dancing round his soul. And, not only so with 
eating and drinking, but all his surroundings and deportment 
must be in keeping. It is the Lord's body ; and if you love 
Him best, you will keep it for Him. 

This fruit will also appear in our family relations. We 
shall fulfil the Law to our neighbours. You see, God wants 
only what we have. He is not a hard master, and the Great 
Teacher said, " This is the law and the prophets." This is 
the great commandment, embracing all the rest, " Thou shalt 
love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and mind, and soul, 
and strength," and the second is like unto it, "And thy neigh- 
bor as thyself;" and the man who does that is a perfect 
man, fulfils the law ; and when you have the fulness of love 
that enables you to love God best and your neighbor as your- 
self — enables you to do for the souls and bodies of your 
fellows what you would that they should do for you, if they 
had your light and were in your circumstances, then the law 
is fulfilled in you. Such people cannot sit 365 days in the 
year at the table with unconverted people and never try to 
get them saved. Such people cannot abide in the same house 
with unbelievers and not make them miserable. Oh, no. 
The unconverted say, "It's too wretched to live here. I must 
get out of this crying and praying for me all day long." As 
a servant once said, she couldn't stand it. She had had 
praying enough at home, without coming there to have it. 
She did stand it for six weeks, and broke down at family al- 
tar, got saved, and became a preacher afterward. This spirit 
of love will make every unconverted sinner within your reach 
so miserable that they will have to be converted or run away. 
How would you do if he were dying ? You would run 
about in every direction to get a minister. What a pity 
you did not feel like this twelve years ago. You might 



112 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



have got the sinner converted then, and he have been serving 
the Lord all this time ? But, now he is dying, what a stir 
you make. What a purely selfish religion that is. You 
want him saved, so that he may get into He a vex, not that 
he might serve, honour, and glorify God. You don't care at 
all about that. He might live on in disobedience. Oh, be as 
much concerned for the honour of God as you are for your 
friends' salvation at the last, and then God will know how 
to save them. 

This fruit will also appear in your church relations. It 
will bring forth fruit. As the Apostle says, "Exhorting one 
another daily, not suffering sin in your neighbour; reproving 
each other, and confessing you faults the one to the other." 
Where is any of it done ? I should like very much to attend 
such a meeting, if you invite me, where Christians really and 
honestly confess their faults one to the other and pray for 
one another, beseeching the Lord to heal them in those par- 
ticular points where they have failed, telling one another of 
the deep things of God, and talking lovingly and freely to 
one another as they used to do. The communion of saints — 
exhorting one another daily. The devil is at it daily. The 
world is plying for us daily. The flesh is there daily. Every- 
thing else goes on daily. Why should not this exhorting 
one another, confessing your faults to one another, and pray- 
ing for one another, go on daily, too ? 

Is it a fact that we are each other's keeper ? Is it a fact 
that God will require for our influence over other souls ? I 
believe it is. 

Then in our relations to the world . But I forestalled 

this in my address on "Aggressive Effort." And now let us 
go down on our knees before God and ask Him to work this 
love in us, and give us this spirit, that we may thus EULITL 
THIS LAW in all its relations. 



SERMON VII. 



WITNESSING FOE CHRIST. 

W Ye shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in 

Samaria, and unto the uttermost parts of the earth." — Acts i. 8. 
" And ye are witnesses of these things." — Acts v. 32. 

Again and again the same vocation and commission is be- 
stowed upon the apostles and disciples. To the ends of the 
earth and to the end of time this commission comes down 
to everyone of the Lord's own, for He says : " Go ye into 
all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature, and, 
lo, I will be with you alwaj^s, even unto the end of the 
world." That embraces us. And to every disciple who 
has preceded, or is to follow us, is promised His Divine 
Presence in this glorious work of testifying for Him. 

God needs witnesses in this world. 

Why? Because the whole world is in revolt against 
Him. The world has gone away from God. The world 
ignores God, denies, contradicts His testimony, misunder- 
stands His character, government, and purposes, and is 
gone off into utter and universal revolt and rebellion. Now 
if God is to keep any hold upon man at all, and have any 
influence with him, He must be represented down here. 
There was no other way of doing it. If you get a province 
of this realm in anarchy and rebellion, unless there be a 
party in the province to represent the Queen and the govern- 

113 



114 



AGGRESSIVE CHBISTTANITT. 



ment, it will go altogether and be lost to the kingdom for 
ever; there must be a party to represent the rightful 
sovereign, the law and the government. So God must be 
represented, and, praise His name, He has had His faithful 
witnesses from the beginning until now. As the Apostle 
says — " He left not Himself without witnesses." Down 
from the days of Enoch, who walked with God, to this 
present hour, God has always had His true and faithful 
witnesses. In the worst times there have been some burn- 
ing and shining lights. Sometimes few and far between, 
sometimes, like ZSToah, one solitary man in a whole gener- 
ation of men, witnessing for God — but there has-been one. 
God has not left Hiraself without witnesses. 

But Jesus Christ the Son, the well-beloved of the Father 
— He was the great Witness. He came especially to mani- 
fest, to testify of, and to reveal the Father to men. This 
was His great work. He came not to testify of Himself 
but of His Father, not to speak His own words, but the 
words His Father gave Him to speak. He came to reveal 
God to men. He was the great Witness. And when He 
had to leave the world and go back to His Father, then He 
commissioned His disciples to take His place and to be God's 
witnesses on earth. And oh ! friends, God's real people are 
His only witnesses. He will not allow angels — we do not 
know why — to witness for Him here. He has called man 
to witness for Him, — His people — "Ye are my witnesses." 

Jesus gave a good testimony — did He not ? He wit- 
nessed nobly, constantly, bravely of His Father, and sealed 
His testimony with His blood. The world treated Him as 
it has treated most of God's faithful witnesses from the 
beginning ; it persecuted Him ; it slew Him, as it would 
every faithful witness for God — if God allowed it — and 



"WITNESSING FOR CHRIST. 



115 



would leave itself without a single spiritual light : for the 
spirit that worketh in the children of disobedience hath an 
eternal and devilish hatred of every real, living, spiritual 
child of God. It hates Him as it hated the Son Himself, 
and it is not the devil's fault if he does not extinguish and 
exterminate every such witness. It is because God will not 
allow him, but holds us, keeps us, saves us, in spite of him. 

The Lord commissioned, then, His disciples to be His 
witnesses, and He said — oh ! beautiful words, and yet, how 
much they involve which few understand — " As Thou hast 
sent Me into the world, even so send I them into the world." 
Even so : as Thou hast sent Me to be Thy representative in 
the world, to spend and be spent for Thee, and shed My 
blood for Thee, if necessary, so send I them ; — and so He 
did send them, and they had just the same fare as their 
Master, and many of them just the same end. But they 
were faithful witnesses, and they went forward and testified 
everywhere, to the Jews and to the Gentiles, in the Temple 
and in the market-place, by the wayside and in the high- 
ways and hedges — they went and testified of this Saviour, 
and charged the wicked Jews with His crucifixion, and God 
accompanied their testimony by the Spirit, and thousands 
upon thousands were converted — turned from their rebel- 
lion to God. 

Now, the fact that witnessing is necessary shows that 
there is controversy going on in the world as to the things and 
claims of God — that there are two sides to this, as to every 
other case. The great mass of mankind say that God's 
truth is a lie. They say it virtually, if they do not say it 
in words, and many thousands of them, alas ! in words, also. 
They deny, many of them, His very existence, and say 
there is neither Heaven nor Hell — that Jesus Christ was a 



I 

116 AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 

mere man — that religion is a myth, and that there is no 
such thing as the knowledge of forgiveness of sins — that 
this witnessing is a grand delusion, and that there is nothing 
of the kind ! 

Now, Christ calls His people to go and be witnesses to 
these facts. Witnesses, you know, must deal with facts, not 
theories — not what they think and believe, merely, but 
what they know. Now, God wants His people to witness to 
facts — to something that has been done, and is being done 
— something that is, and continues to be — fact. 

And He wants us to be good witnesses, too. Oh ! how 
much depends upon the character of a witness even in an 
earthly court. If you can cast a reflection upon the previous 
character or veracity of a witness, you shake his testimony, 
and take away its value. Oh ! how important that Christ's 
witnesses should be good witnesses — that is, that they 
should fairly and truly represent Him and His truth — for, 
if they misrepresent Him, somebody is sure to be damned 
through their inconsistency — and, oh ! to have the blood of 
souls upon our skirts ! To misrepresent a man, or woman, 
or child, is bad enough, but to misrepresent God! — to show 
a caricature of the religion of Jesus Christ ! — to say to 
people, virtually, "Look at me: this is the religion of Jesus 
Christ — the way I live and act — what i am." I say, such 
a man had far better have had a millstone hanged about 
his neck and been drowned in the depths of the sea. There 
would, then, be an end of his mischief ; but a false witness 
for Jesus Christ is the greatest traitor on the face of the 
earth. He does more harm than a thousand false earthly 
witnesses. Oh ! my friends, to be good witnesses for Jesus 
Christ ! The more a witness is supposed to know of the truth 
to which he testifies, the greater his responsibility. Oh! 



WITNESSING FOR CHRIST. 



117 



for a minister to be a bad witness, as some of the prophets 
of old were. Look at the awful things God says about 
them that lead His people into the ditch, caring more about 
the fleece than the sheep — awful! For a mother to be a 
bad witness in her family, and to take her little children, 
clinging on to her skirts, right to the edge of the pit ! For a 
master to be a bad witness — to profess to be a Christian 
and to be a bad witness before his men; for a Sunday- 
school teacher to be a bad, inconsistent, false witness of 
Jesus Christ in his class; for members of Christian 
churches to be bad witnesses to one another, and to the 
world; who can tell the awful results ? Oh! it is this in- 
consistent witnessing that has lowered and lowered the 
standard of practical Christianity till we have not got any 
standard left — till the landmarks are so obliterated that 
there are not any to be seen. 

Faithful witnesses ! He wants us to be faithful wit- 
nesses. 

I want to note one or tivo qualifications of a faithful wit- 
ness, and, oh, may the Holy Spirit help us. 

The first qualification, then, of a faithful witness, is, A 
personal knowledge of the facts to which he witnesses. If a 
witness in a court of justice begins to talk of what he 
thinks, feels, and believes — " oh ! hush, hush/' says the 
judge, " we can't have that ; we want to know what you 
know — what you have seen, heard, and felt of this case ; " 
and these are the sort of witnesses Jesus Christ wants, who 
can get up and say "I know!" The sort of witness that 
St. Paul was, who could look his judge in the face and say, 
" I would that thou wert altogether such as I am, save these 
bonds." What an impudent man he must have been, if he 
was not a sanctified man. What a supreme egotist ! Those 



118 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



are the sort of witnesses. How Agrippa must have felt, 
just then. How the tables were turned. " Oh ! I am turned 
into the dock, and here is the prisoner taking his seat upon 
the bench." That is the sort of witnessing we want. "I 
would that thou wert altogether such as I am, except these 
chains." Could you stand up in the dock and say that ? 
Could you stand up in your own house and say it ? Could 
you stand up anywhere and say it ? That is what the Lord 
Jesus Christ wants — people who know, who experience, who 
realize, who live the things they witness to. This is what 
the world is dying for — people who can get up and say, " I 
KNOW." The Lord wants people to tell the world they 
are saved. Can you ? They will begin to listen to you, 
then. You will begin to have some effect upon them. They 
will begin to open their eyes and ears, and wonder whether 
it will be possible for God to save them. That is altogther 
different to a fine-spun theory about religion — telling them 
that God has saved you. Not what we have learned in 
books. The world is sick of that. I don't wonder at intel- 
ligent men flying off from religion. I can make great excuse 
when I think what many of them have to listen to from 
Sunday to Sunday. As a gentleman said to me, "It's 
enough to sicken anybody. We do get something in the 
papers, but, upon my word, I can't keep awake at church. 
It is not that I would not, if I could, but I can't." Poor 
fellow ! — how I pitied him. 

No ! not what is got from books ; not a dry, fine-spun 
theory, from mere hearsay. When a witness begins with 
what he heard someone say, "oh, hush!" says the judge, 
" we don't want that, we want to know what you have seen. 
Keep to the facts." Jesus Christ wants you to keep to the 
facts. Tell them, as John says, what you have seen, and 



WITNESSING FOR CHRIST. 



119 



heard, and handled, and realized of the truth of God. Per- 
sonat knowledge! It is wonderful how simple salvation 
language is, when you have learnt it by experience, and are 
prepared to speak plainly to the people. 

Then, a faithful witness must tell the truth, and the whole 
truth. He must not hold back anything on account of per- 
sonal inconvenience, suffering, loss, or gain — the whole 
truth. Oh ! I tremble to think what will be the fate of some 
who set themselves up as teachers, and who have kept back 
part of the truth because, to their apprehension, it was not 
palatable or profitable to mankind. What have I got to do 
with that? I have to preach the truth — the beautiful, 
whole, round, diamond, luminous with Divine light, and not 
split down the middle and made into damning error, by 
which Satan is carrying down thousands to Hell. The 
whole truth — both sides : the side that relates to God, and 
the side that relates to man, and be done with the nonsense 
of making God contradict Himself, for "God is light, and 
in Him is no darkness at all." If there were contradic- 
tions, there would be darkness. No ; the darkness is in our 
own poor, little, puny brains, and not in God or in His 
Book. In His Book, rightly interpreted, there is no contra- 
diction whatsoever. The whole truth : the convicting truth 
as well as the healing truth ; the sword as well as the balm ; 
the running in of the Divine knife as well as the pouring in 
of the Divine oil. As Paul says, in the 26th chapter and 
18th verse, " To open their eyes, and to turn them from 
darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God, 
that they may receive forgiveness of sins." He says he 
preached to the J ews and Gentiles that they should repent. 
This is the Apostle Paul, the great expounder of Justifica- 
tion by Faith, " That they should repent," and what ? 



120 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



— oh, you legal Paul, what ? — "Do works meet for repent- 
ance." Oh, Paul, I thought you were saved from works 
altogether, and had done with the Law. Oh! you preach 
works, and doing works meet for repentance. That is not 
Gospel, Paul ! He significantly adds, " For this cause the 
J ews caught me, and tried to kill me : " and for that cause 
the Pharisees have been trying to kill God's true, whole- 
truth witnesses ever since, for they don't like the doctrine 
that cuts idols and sin in twain, and that says, " Bring forth 
fruits meet for repentance." 

The faithful witness must give the whole truth ; and he 
must give it personally, too. A faithful witness must give 
it himself. He can't witness by proxy. He may pay one 
hundred and fifty witnesses to go and witness for him : that 
is all right. It is no more than he ought to do — two hun- 
dred and fifty, if he has money enough — because the Master 
claims all that he has, little or much, every farthing of it. 

Therefore he can never do any more than he ought, when 
he has done all ; but that will not exonerate him from the 
obligation. If I have put my candle in you, it is that it 
may shine for somebody else's benefit. If I have given you 
the bread of life, it is for you to go and break it to the fam- 
ishing multitudes round about you. Ye are my witnesses. 
You may pay the ministers and the missionary, but you must 
do it yourself, too, for how can one witness make up for tiuo ? 
True, God wants the minister to witness, and it is no more 
than his duty if he witnesses all day long as long as he 
lives. But that will never make up for your lack of ser- 
vice. YOU must witness ; and there are some souls with 
whom you have more influence than any other living being, 

— some souls that you can better get at than any other per- 
son — some souls that, if you do not save, will, probably, 



WITNESSING FOR CHRIST. 



121 



never be saved at all. Ye are my witnesses, and, if ye have 
the grace and love and light of God, it is at the peril of 
your soul if you hide it. 

Then, in the next place, faithful witnesses must speak out, 
not mince the matter — not u mumble," as they say in court. 
The judge makes the witness speak up so that everybody 
may hear him. He must be heard, " Speak out." And why 
should not the Lord's witnesses speak out ? I wonder when 
we shall be done with this sneaking, hole and corner, shame- 
faced religion! I wonder when Christian England will 
cease to be ashamed of its God ! ! The only nation under 
Heaven ashamed of its religion and its God is the one that 
has got the true God to worship and to love. What an an- 
omaly ! Speak out ! ! 

David knew nothing about this mincing, half-and-half, 
milk-and-water sort of religion. David rejoiced to tell of 
His righteousness before the great congregation. He was 
always telling about His goodness, and His law, and singing 
about it all the day long, dancing before the ark sometimes, 
and doing all manner of demonstrative things to glorify his 
God. And that was not enough, for when he had called 
upon all human kind to praise Him, he called on the hills 
and the trees to clap their hands and to dance for joy. We 
want some of that sort of religion now-a-days. Talk of the 
new dispensation, I wish we could get a bit of that back. 

The interests of truth demand this outspokenness. How 
is error to be met but by the bold proclamation of the truth ? 
How are the emissaries of Satan palming upon mankind his 
lies — always at it, night and day — how are they to be 
silenced but by witnesses faithfully crying in their ears, 
" This is a lie, and that is a lie. This is the truth and this 
is the way $ we know, we see ; we feel — walk ye in it," 



122 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



Turn ye, turn ye, for why will ye die ? They want out- 
spoken witnesses. There are plenty of false witnesses now 
as there ever were, and what does Jesus Christ want ? He 
wants His true witnesses to come out and face them, and be 
a match for them, — not to sneak away in holes and corners, 
and be ashamed of it and talk about an unobtrusive religion 
—unobtrusive nonsense! There is no such thing ! Come 
out before the world. If He be God, speak for Him. As 
Elijah said, "If He be God serve Him, but if Baal, serve 
him." Then away with all this nonsense, your sanctuaries, 
and Bibles, and profession — have done with it all and follow 
Baal. Be one thing or the other. If he be God . serve 
him. And methinks there wants an Elijah now to come 
and ring it all through England. I would like to see any 
man get up and make a straightforward recognition of and 
appeal to, God, in our Houses of Parliament, and I would 
like to see how he would be greeted. 

I was thinking, as I was passing the Eoyal Exchange, and 
saw on the top " The earth is the Lord's and the fullness 
thereof," how many believed it who walked beneath its 
shadow. I wonder what anyone would be thought of were 
he practically to recognise the fact. " Oh ! " they would say, 
"he's not fit for his post — you'll have to take him away; 
he's a little affected in his head." Oh ! you know it is so ; 
but God is not mocked, though men think He is. God sits 
in the circle of Heaven, and though the people do rage, and 
the heathen imagine a vain thing, and the kings of the earth 
set themselves, He is laughing at them, and by-and-by will 
come their calamity. 

We say the world is dying ; — what for ? Sermons ? No. 
Periodicals ? No. Religious stories ? Oh ! dear, no. There 
is no chance of a want of them for many a long year to come. 



WITNESSING FOR CHRIST. 



123 



Dying for disquisitions ? No. For fine-spun theories ? No* 
For creeds and faiths ? Oh ! you might have them by the 
dozen. What is it dying for ? — downright, straightforward, 
honest, loving, earnest testimony about what God can do 
for souls. That is what it wants. That is what those poor 
men in the shops, those walking up and down Oxford Street, 
in the theatres, in the dancing saloons, in the concert rooms 
— everywhere, that is what men want : somebody to come 
and take them lovingly by the collar, and tell them that 
God is God, and that He can save them. " He has saved 
me, my brother, and He can save you ! " That is what the 
world wants. One word like that is better than a sermon, 
and it will do more for God and the salvation of the world. 
Oh, yes, men are saying, in fact all over this land — thou- 
sands, "Here I am; I am a poor slave of sin. I know it." 
They say it in their consciences though they do not say it to 
you. They say it often to us when they are pushed into a 
corner by the sword of the Spirit. " I know I am wrong, 
sinful, wicked." As that dear John Allen, whose life I have 
been telling about, said once when sitting swearing, surround- 
ed by his companions, and somebody said to him, "Jock, 
if you were to die, what would become of you ? " "I should 
go to hell, straight ! " He was an honest fellow. He knew 
where he was going, and he said it. 

I said to a gentleman, " Mr. So-and-so, what about your 
soul?" He said, "It's in a devilish state." Poor man! 
He knew where he was going, and there are thousands like 
him. Do you think they don't feel their bondage ? Have 
they not got a mind and a conscience ? Have they not a 
better side, as you call it, to their nature ? Has not God 
flashed the light of His Holy Spirit upon their dark souls, 
and have they not struggled and striven ? Yes, but they say, 



124 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



" There is no health in us ; there is no help for us. We 
have done making resolutions and trying to be better ; we can- 
not. There is no hope in us." And there they are, waiting 
for somebody to come and tell them there is HELP IN GOD. 
They say, u I see precious little difference in you religious 
folks ; I have never known anybody that religion has seemed 
to do much for." And, when they are told to believe, they 
laugh at you, and I don't wonder at it. The poor human con- 
science is better instructed than many of its teachers. It 
wants to be put right, and it says, is there any hope ? Can 
God save such as I am ? Has He saved anybody like me 
from this thraldom, from this slavery, from this misery, 
from this constantly going down in the mud ? Did he ever 
save anybody like me ? And sometimes he goes to chapel 
or church, and hopes the minister will tell him, when lo, he 
begins a dissertation about the resurrection, or the divinity 
of Christ, or something the man has believed all his life, and 
so he is disappointed again, and he says, " This is of no use 
to me." Oh ! friends, I speak the things I know from the 
testimony of scores of souls. In fact, I could not repeat it, 
it would make your faces burn to hear what men of intelli- 
gence, thought and standing, have said to me in many an 
ante-room where I have been labouring. It is time there 
was a change. The world is famishing for lack of real spir- 
itual bread. It wants something to eat, and you give it a 
stone ! but God is raising a peojrte who know what it wants 
and how to give it, who know how to break the bread of life, 
and testify what God has done for them, and what he can do 
for other poor famishing souls ; who can say : " Here, my 
friend, He can save such as you. I was such an one once. 
I was a slave of sin, the slave of drink, or a blasphemer, or 
3, liar, or a thief ; or addicted to some bad secret habit worse 



"WITNESSING FOU CHRIST. 



125 



than any of these. 1 was such a slave, and he has saved 
me. He has broken my fetters and set me free, and I am 
the Lord's free-man. He has saved me and He can save 
you." That is what the world wants — TESTIMONY WIT- 
NESSING. 

Has He saved any of you ? Are you testifying to your 
poor, famishing, sinking fellow-men ? Do you ever look at 
them and think where they are going ? Do you pity them, 
love them, long after them in the bowels of Jesus Christ ? 
Do you know anything of that longing ? If so, how can you 
forbear testifying ? " Ye are my witnesses of these things/' 
everywhere, at all times, amongst all people ! ! 

It is in the nature of the case that a witness must witness 
before other people, before living hearers. That is the place 
to witness, and before enemies, and when he does not know 
which way -the wind will blow, or how the words of God will 
be received. He must be a true witness, even if he has to 
seal his testimony with his blood. 

This was the kind of witnessing the martyrs did. I often 
wonder whether there would be any martyrs now. Some- 
times I think that the greatest boon to the Church of Christ 
would be a time of persecution. I believe it would. I be- 
lieve it would drive us up to God and each other. We 
should find out, then, whether we were willing to forsake 
all to follow Him. You know that if the martyrs had taken 
the standard of religious life that exists now, they would 
never have been martyrs. They would have looked after 
their own skins, and left the Lord to look after the Gospel. 
If they might have been allowed a little latitude, and gone 
half way, there would not have been any martyrs, because 
they could nearly all have got off with that ; but they felt 
it necessary to be faithful right through, and to stand by 



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the truth to the very last jot and tittle, and when they 
could have got off by saying three words on a paper, they 
refused to do it, and went to the stake, and let the flames 
lick up their blood. Those are the witnesses the Lord 
wants — outside, everywhere, always at it. Always wit- 
nessing. " Always ?" you say. Yes $ always. Why ? Be- 
cause men are always dying and being damned! — if the 
Bible is true — everywhere — your friends and your neigh- 
bors around you. You get a letter : " Oh ! Mr. So-and-so is 
dead — only ill three days — thirty-six hours — twenty-four 
hours — gone ! 99 Ah ! and the echo in many a soul after- 
wards is, " What would I give to go and have one talk with 
him." But he's gone — somewhere! Where is he gone? If 
he were unwashed and unpardoned and unsaved — where is 
he gone ? I got so wrought up once upon this point that I 
thought I should have lost my reason. I could not sleep 
at night with thinking of the state of those who die unsaved. 
Dare I think about it ? Where is he gone ? 

Oh I it ivas this view of the case that led me to open my 
mouth first in public for God, 

I have promised some friends here to-night to give this 
illustration from my own experience, or else I rarely refer 
to it. I had long had a controversy on this question in my 
soul. In fact, from the time I was converted, the Spirit of 
God had constantly been urging me into paths of usefulness 
and labour, which seemed to me impossible. Perhaps some 
of you would hardly credit that I was one of the most 
timid and bashful disciples the Lord Jesus ever saved. 
For ten years of my Christian life my life was one daily 
battle with the cross — not because I wilfully rejected, as 
many do, for that I never dared to do. Oh, no ! I used to 
make up my mind I would, and resolve and intend, and 



WITNESSING FOR CHRIST. 



127 



then, when the hour came, I used to fail for want of cour- 
age. I need not have failed. I now see how foolish I was, 
and how wrong ; but, for some four or five months before I 
commenced speaking, the controversy had been signally 
roused in my soul which God had awakened years before, 
but which, through mistaken notions, fear, and timidity, I 
had almost allowed to die out. I was brought to very severe 
heart-searchings at this time. I had not been realizing so 
much of the Divine presence. I had lost a great deal of 
the power and happiness I once enjoyed. During a season 
of sickness, one day it seemed as if the Lord revealed it all 
to me by His Spirit. I had no vision, but a revelation to 
my mind. He seemed to take me back to the time when I 
was fifteen and sixteen, when I first gave my heart to Him. 
He seemed to show me all the bitter way, how this one 
thing had been the fly in the pot of ointment, the bitter in 
the cup, and prevented me from realizing what I should 
otherwise have done. I felt how it had hindered the reve- 
lation of Himself to me, and hindered me from growing 
in grace, and learning more of the deep things of God. 
He showed it to me, and then I remember prostrating 
myself upon my face before Him, and I promised Him 
there in the sick-room : " Lord, if Thou wilt return unto 
me, as in the days of old, and re-visit me with those urgings 
of Thy Spirit which I used to have, I will obey, if I die in 
the attempt. I care not 5 I will obey." However, the Lord 
did not re-visit me immediately. He let me recover, and I 
went out again. About three months after that I went to 
the chapel of which my husband was a minister, and he had 
an extraordinary service. Even then he was trying some- 
thing new to get the outside people. They were having a 
meeting in which ministers and friends in the town were 



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taking part, and all giving their testimony and speaking for 
God. I was in the minister's pew, with my eldest boy, then 
four years old, and there were some thousand people present. 
I felt much more depressed than usual in spirit, and not 
expecting anything particular, but, as the testimonies went 
on, I felt the Spirit come upon me. You alone who have 
felt it know what it means. It cannot be described. I felt 
it to the extremities of my fingers and toes. It seemed as 
if a voice said to me, " Now, if you were to go and testify, 
you know I would bless it to your own soul as well as to the 
souls of the people/' and I gasped again, and I said in my 
soul, " Yes, Lord, I believe Thou wouldst, but I cannot do 
it." I had forgotten my vow — it did not occur to me at all. 
All in a moment, after I had said that to the Lord, I seemed 
to see the bedroom where I had lain, and to see myself as 
though I had been there prostrate before the Lord promis- 
ing Him that, and then the voice seemed to say to me, " Is 
this consistent with that promise ? " and I almost jumped 
up and said, " No, Lord, it is the old thing over again, but 
I cannot do it," and I felt as though I would sooner die 
than do it. And then the Devil said, " Besides, you are not 
prepared to speak. You will look like a fool, and have 
nothing to say." He made a mistake. He overdid him- 
self for once. It was that word settled it. 1 said, " Ah ! 
this is just the point. I have never yet been willing to be 
a fool for Christ, now I will be one ; " and without stopping 
another moment, I rose up in the seat, and walked up the 
chapel. My dear husband was just going to conclude. He 
thought something had happened to me, and so did the peo- 
ple. We had been there two years, and they knew my 
timid, bashful nature. He stepped down to ask me, " What 
is the matter, my dear ? " I said, " I want to say a word." 



WITNESSING FOft CHRIST. 



129 



He was so taken by surprise, he could only say, " My dear 
wife wants to say a word/' and sat down. He had been try- 
ing to persuade me to do it for ten years. He and a lady in 
the church, only that very week, had been trying to per- 
suade me to go and address a little cottage meeting, of some 
twenty working people, but could not. I got up — God 
only knows how — and if any mortal ever did hang on the 
arm of Omnipotence, I did. I felt as if I were clinging 
to some human arm — and yet it was a Divine arm — to 
hold me. I just got up and told the people how it came 
about. I confessed, as, I think, everybody should, when they 
have been in the wrong and misrepresented the religion of 
Jesus Christ. I told the people, although I had been occu- 
pying all the ordinary positions of a minister's wife, though 
I was young then I had been doing a great deal more than 
many an elderly one does in the church of God, in the way 
of meeting believers, and visiting and working behind the 
scenes, so that they had all been regarding me as a very de- 
voted woman, and I told them so. I said, " I dare say many 
of you have been regarding me as a very devoted woman, 
and one who has been living faithfully to God, but I have 
come to know that I have been living in disobedience, and 
to that extent I have brought darkness and leanness into my 
soul, but I promised the Lord three or four months ago, and 
I dare not disobey. I have come to tell you this, and to 
promise the Lord that I will be obedient to the Heavenly 
vision." 

But oh ! how little I saw then what it involved. I never 
imagined the life of publicity it was going to lead me into, 
and of trial also ; for I was never allowed to have another 
quiet Sabbath, when I could speak or stand up. All I took 
there was the present step. I did not see in advance, but 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



the Lord ; as lie always does, when His people are honest 
with Him, and obedient, opened the windows of Heaven, 
and poured out such a blessing, that there was not room to 
contain it. 

There was more weeping, they said, in the chapel that 
day than ever there had been before. Many dated a renew- 
al in righteousness from that very moment, and began a life 
of devotion and consecration to God. 

Now, I might have " talked good " to them till now, and 
that would never have happened. That honest confession, 
coming out and testifying the truth, did what twenty years' 
talk would never have done. 

The work went on. Whenever I spoke, the chapel used 
to be crowded to its utmost capacity, and numbers were con- 
verted. Not to me, but to God be all the glory. Shame to 
me that I did not begin sooner. It was not I that did this, 
but the Holy Ghost, the Holy Spirit of God. 

The Lord dealt with me in a very wonderful way. Three 
months after this, my dear husband fell sick the first time, 
and he was obliged to go away into the country. A depu- 
tation waited on me, to ask me to take his town appoint- 
ments. I said I could not think of such a thing. What 
could I do with that great congregation ? They must not 
ask me — and away they went. They came back again to 
know if I would take the nights, they implored and im- 
portuned me until I promised. So you see, God forced me 
to begin to think and work. I was obliged, and I did it 
with four little children, the eldest then four years and 
three months old. It looked an inopportune time, did it 
not, to begin to preach ? It looked as though the Lord 
must have made a mistake. However, He gave me grace 
and strength, and enabled me to do it ; and while I was 



WITNESSING FOR CHRIST. 131 

nursing my baby, many a time I was thinking of what I was 
going to say next Sunday, and between times noted down 
with a pencil the thoughts as they struck me. And then I 
would appear sometimes, with an outline scratched in 
pencil, trusting in the Lord to give me the power of His 
Holy Spirit; and I think I can say that from that day — 
and it is about nineteen years and nine months since — He 
has never allowed me to open my mouth without giving me 
signs of His presence and blessing. Don't you see that 
while the devil kept me silent, he kept me comparatively 
fruitless ; now I have ground to hope and expect to meet 
hundreds in glory, whom God has made me instrumental in 
saving. The Lord dealt very tenderly with me : giving me 
great encouragement, but some things were dreadful to me 
at first. I would not go into pulpits till the people demand- 
ed it. And the first time I saw my name on a wall ! — I 
shall never forget the sensation. Then my dear husband 
said, "When you gave yourself to the Lord, did you not 
give Him your name ? " Thus he used to go from one 
thing to another, until now I have learned to glory in the 
Cross. When a dear friend was talking, the other day, 
about the tremendous undertaking it was to go to France 
and begin there, I said, " My dear sir, I should not feel any 
more discomposed to go to France, and open there next 
Sunday, than I should to appear in St. Andrew's Hall, 
simply for this reason, that I believe God is the same in 
every place, and the same faith, and the same truths and 
the same faithfulness will bring Him to our help." "Ye 
are my witnesses," saith the Lord, " And, lo, I am with you 
ALWAYS!" 

Will you be encouraged, my sister ? Never mind tremb- 
ling. I trembled. Never mind your heart beating. Mine 



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beat nearly through. Never mind how weak you are. I 
have gone many a time from the bed to the pulpit, and back 
from the pulpit to bed. It is not by human power, wisdom, 
might, or strength — it is by My Spirit, saith the Lord. He 
loves to use the weak things, that the excellency may be 
seen to be of God. Were your neighbors sick of some devas- 
tating plague, and you could go and help them, would not 
you do it ? Would you say, " I am only a woman, and I can- 
not ? 99 " Oh," you would say, " let me go, like Miss Night- 
ingale did to the sick and wounded soldiers. Let me go." 
And these are not the bodies, but the souls. They are dying. 
They are going to an eternal death. Will you not rise up ? 
Oh ! suppose all the Christians in this hall to-night were to 
begin, from this hour, to be faithful, and consistently testi- 
fying everywhere for Jesus, what a commotion there would 
be ! How many, think you, would be converted in a month's 
time ? How would they begin flocking like doves to the 
windows ? How would the ministers, some of them, begin 
to wake up ? The people would go and beseech them morn- 
ing, noon, and night. God wants you to witness right out 
everywhere, in the darkest courts and alleys and in Oxford 
Street alike. Begin, and the Spirit of God will fall upon 
you, and however they may try to get rid of the Holy Ghost, 
they will not be able to do it when God has got hold of them. 
We catch thousands of people in this way who never intend- 
ed to be converted. Every day I live the more I am con- 
vinced that if God's people were to be in desperate earnest, 
thousands would be won ; but they are not likely to be won 
by the genteel fashion of putting the truth before them — 
so common now-a-days — because nobody thinks they are in 
danger ! If you believe it, begin. The Apostle says you are 
to be good, valiant soldiers of Jesus Christ; the old Chris- 



WITNESSING FOR CHRIST. 



133 



tians, were all this ; they fought a good warfare, and they 
overcame the devil by the " blood of the Lamb and the word 
of their testimony" Be soldiers for the Lord, and He will 
give the victory, and you shall go and take prisoners. Great 
big giants, black-hearted infidels, black-hearted blasphemers, 
they shall go down before you like little children, because 
the Lord of Hosts will put His Spirit in you. " Ye are My 
witnesses ! " WITNESS of Me everywhere and always. 
The Lord help you. Amen. 



SERMON VIII. 



FILLED WITH THE SPIEIT. 

" And being assembled together with them, commanded them that they should 
not depart from Jerusalem, but wait for the promise of the Father." — 
Acts i. 4. 

"Be filled with the Spirit."— Ephesians v. 18. 

I thought, perhaps, it would meet a difficulty of some 
who are present this afternoon, to state, with respect to last 
Sabbath's address, that this exhortation, to be filled with the 
Spirit, is given broadly to all believers. If my remarks, at 
that time, conveyed the idea to anyone, that there were 
merely a privileged few who were called to be thus filled 
with the Spirit — to be, as it were, the leaders of the rest, 
and others were to abide, and must abide, on a lower plat- 
form of Christian experience, I certainly did not intend 
them to do so. God forbid that I should insinuate anything 
of the kind, because I do not believe it. I believe that this 
injunction is given broadly to all believers everywhere, and 
in all times, and it is as much the privilege of the youngest 
and weakest believer here to be filled with the Spirit, as 
it is of the most advanced, if the believer will comply 
with the conditions, and conform to the injunctions of 
the Saviour, on which He has promised this gift. I do 
not find two standards of Christian experience here at all. 
I do not believe God ever intended there should be a lower 
W 



FILLED WITH THE SPIRIT. 



135 



life and a higher life, and I am afraid that those people who 
rest in the lower life will find themselves awfully mistaken 
at last. I believe that religion is all or nothing. God is 
either first or He is nowhere with us, individually. The 
very essence and core of religion is, " God first/' and alle- 
giance and obedience to Him first. 

If I cannot keep my father and mother and be faithful to 
God, then I must forsake my father and mother. If I can- 
not keep my husband or wife, and be faithful to Him, then 
I must forsake husband or wife. If I cannot keep my 
children and be faithful to Him, then Jesus Christ says, 
forsake them. And if I cannot keep my houses and lands 
and be faithful to Him, then I must forsake them. If I can- 
not keep my business and be faithful to Him, then I must 
sacrifice my business, and if I cannot keep my health and 
be faithful to Him, then I must sacrifice it, and, last of all, 
if I cannot keep my life and be faithful to Him, then I must 
be prepared to lose it, and lay my neck on the block, if need 
be. This is my religion, and I do not know any other. I 
do not believe any other will stand on the right hand of the 
throne ; and, if that be so, why, all other sorts must stand 
on the left. If this be not true, I am utterly and thoroughly 
mistaken in the first principles of Christianity, and I will 
come and sit down at anybody's feet who can convince me 
that I am wrong. So, pray, do not attach that idea to me 
that I think that any person can sit down, providing he has 
light, or with opportunities of getting light, without em- 
bracing this higher-life religion, and then get into Heaven 
in this shame-faced, sneaking way. No, no!— God will 
have you or He will not have you. He will know you or 
will say, " Depart from me, I know you not." The Lord 
help you every one. 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



This Pentecost is offered, to all believers. It comes, or it 
would come, in the experience of every believer, if he would 
have it. God wants you to have it. God calls you- to it. 
Jesus Christ has bought it for you, and you may have it and 
live in its power as much as these apostles did, if you will 
— every one of you. My dear friends, you may have it, be 
filled with it, and no one but God knows what He would 
do with you and what he would make of you if you were 
thus filled, for the experience of Peter shows you how 
utterly different a man is before he gets a Pentecostal bap- 
tism and after he gets it. The man who could not stand the 
questionings of a servant-maid before he got this power, 
dared to be crucified after he got it. I may just say, that 
here is the great cause of the decline of so many who begin 
well. " Ye did run well," we might truly say of thousands 
in this land to-day, " Ye did run well." They begin in the 
Spirit, and then, as the Apostle says, " They go on to be 
made perfect by the flesh." How is this ? Because, you 
see, the Spirit puts before every soul this walk of full con- 
secration and whole-hearted devotedness to God, and instead 
of being obedient to the heavenly vision, the soul shrinks 
back and says, " That is too much — that is too close — that 
is too great a sacrifice " — and they decline, and instead of 
giving up a profession and going back into the world (there 
would be ten times more hope of them if they did this), 
they cling on to their profession and kindle a fire of their 
own, and walk in the sparks they have kindled. But He 
says He is against them, and " they shall lie down in sor- 
row." Oh ! there is a deal of this. People must have a 
God and a religion. They will have one, and when they 
shrink from the true one, and will not follow the Divine 
counsel, then they make one for themselves, and a great 



FILLED WITH THE SPIRIT. 



137 



many of them go to sleep and never wake again. They go 
out of the world comfortably under the influence of nar- 
cotics; and they never wake. They die deceived ; or, if they 
do awake, we know what sort of an awakening it is, and 
what sort of a deathbed theirs is. Our poor Salvation Army 
people — these " fishermen," — these young women — are 
sent for to pray with these people when they get awakened. 
And oh! what scenes are witnessed. Oh! see to it that 
you get awake and keep awake, and be willing to follow the 
Spirit's teaching in everything, at all costs and sacrifices. 

I want you to note, first, how these people waited. 
"Tarry at Jerusalem till ye be endowed with power." 
Mark, that is not truth merely. They had got truth before. 
There is something besides truth needed. Paul says his 
Gospel and his preaching were not merely in word, but in 
power, and in the demonstration of the Spirit. What 
would be the first thing that would strike you that these 
disciples would be thinking of, as they wended their way 
back from Olivet, — having taken leave of their now glorified 
Master, — back again to the upper room at Jerusalem? 
Imagine what state of mind would be theirs. How would 
they wait for the promise ? 

Methinks the first feeling would be that of deep self- 
abasement. As they thought of the past ; now that the full 
glory of His Divinity, and the Divinity of His mission had 
burst upon them, and, as they thought of their three years' 
sojourn with Him, and of all their darkness and blindness 
of heart, and all they had lost — all that they might have 
known — all He would have revealed to them, if they would 
have received it — as the thought of it all burst upon them 
just as, next day, when you find out who a person was, or 
gome particular circumstance respecting a person that you 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



did not fully understand at the time, and, when the person 
is gone, and it all breaks upon you, you say, " What a fool 
I was ! " and so methinks these apostles would say. Indeed, 
as he said, " Oh, fools, and slow of heart to believe ! " They 
were cured — Peter certainly was — of self-sufficiency, of 
pride, and all of them would go back again in deep self- 
abasement. 

Can you not think you see them as they assembled in 
the upper room ? I should not be surprised at all if Peter, 
with his impulsive nature — and it is a glorious thing to 
have an impulsive nature when it is impulsive for good — 
to be zealously affected always in a good cause — threw 
himself on his face before his risen Master in deepest hu- 
miliation and broken-heartedness for his base ingratitude in 
having denied Him. And how do you think Thomas and all 
of them would feel as they remembered the scene in the 
Garden, and how they all in the hour of His agony forso r>k 
Him and fled? How would they all feel? Oh! they 
would feel indeed unholy, untrue, cowards, and would go 
down, over and over again, on their faces, to wait in deep 
self-abasement. 

And now, friends, this is the very first and indispensable 
condition of receiving the Holy Ghost. You must first 
realize your past impurity, unholiness, disobedience, and 
ingratitude. You must not be afraid to know the worst of 
yourselves. You must look back at the time when your hand 
has been with Him on the table, and yet you have virtually 
betrayed Him. You must look at your unfaithfulness and 
disobedience, at your shrinking from the cross, at your cleav- 
ing to the world, and if you want to be filled with the Spirit, 
you must be willing to know the worst of yourself, and tell 
the Lord the worst of yourself. You must say, "Now, 



FILLED WITH THE SPIRIT. 



139 



Lord? am I low enough ? Now, Lord, am I down far enough 
in the dust for Thee to come and lift me up? I abhor my- 
self. I loathe myself in dust and ashes, and I want Thee to 
come and fill me with Thy Spirit." You will have to be 
emptied of self. When people are self -sufficient, God al- 
ways leaves them alone to prove their self-sufficiency. When 
people think they can do for themselves, He lets them fall 
down and see their weakness. We must realize our utter 
helplessness and weakness — we must be utterly lost in our 
own sight. Some of you, I think, have come, to that, and 
others are not quite low enough. You must get down 
lower, my brother. God's way to exaltation is through the 
Valley of Humiliation. You must get lower — lower. You 
can never get too low in your own estimation in order to be 
filled with the Spirit of God. 

They waited, secondly, in earnest appreciation of its im- 
portance. Ah! they had enough to make them do it. 
How do you think they felt when they got into the upper 
room ? We are told that there were about 120 of them. 
How do you think they felt as they thought of the past, 
remembered the ignominious crucifixion of their Lord, 
looked forward to the future, and contemplated the work to 
which he had called them ? And what was it ? It was not 
to go and set up an idol of Jesus Christ alongside of other 
idols in the temples of heathen gods, but it was to go into 
the city of Jerusalem, where they had just crucified Him 
between two thieves, and proclaim Him as the long-expected 
Messiah of the Jews. It was to begin to set up this royal 
spiritual kingdom in contradistinction to their temporal and 
earthly kingdom, and then to go out from Jerusalem and 
subjugate the world to His sway ! How would they feel ? 
Poor Peter, and Thomas, and John, and Mary and the rest 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



of the women (thanks to the Holy Ghost, He has taken 
care to put it in that they were there) — how would they 
feel ? They would feel, " We might as well stop and die 
here, as go out as we are, until we do get the equipment of 
power. We want something more than we have got." And 
there they waited, and they said, " Lord, pour it out upon 
us ; we are ready. We are helpless, we are powerless — we 
can do nothing. Thou knowest what Thou hast called us to 
do, and Thou hast promised this power to perform it. Now, 
here we are. It is useless for us to begin until we get 
power." They appreciated its importance. God never gave 
this gift to any human soul who had not come to the point 
that he would sell all he had to get it. Oh ! it is the most 
precious gift He has to give in earth or in Heaven — to be 
filled with the Spirit, filled with Himself (as we said last 
Sunday), taken possession of by God ; moved, inspired, ener- 
gized, empowered by God, by the great indwelling Spirit 
moving through all our faculties, and energizing our whole 
being for Him. This is the greatest and most glorious gift 
He has. He is not likely to give it to people who do not 
highly appreciate it, and so highly that they are willing to 
forego all other gifts for it — everything else, creature love, 
creature comfort, ease, enjoyment, and aggrandizement for 
this one thing. Have you come to that ? Are you telling 
the Lord so ? Are you sincere ? If you are really sincere 
in what some of you write me, then some of you have come 
to it; — but, oh, how people can deceive themselves! My 
heart has been greatly pained during this last week with one 
or two instances of this kind that have come to my notice. 
I have been half the week, I think, with Elijah under the 
juniper tree. I have cried, " Lord, who hath believed our 
report ?" Who will thus take hold of God for this special 



FILLED WITH THE SPIRIT. 



141 



and full salvation ? Alas ! how few. One draws back for 
one reason and another for another. One feels how far they 
come with us. You can hear the tread of their feet, and 
you can hear how they falter and draw back. None but 
those who travail for souls can ever understand the agony 
of feeling that souls are drawing back when you have 
brought them on the road so far. I have thought many 
a time of the Saviour, when so many who had been hearing 
Him forsook Him and fled. It was after he had been trying 
to lead them higher, even to real spiritual union with Him- 
self. 

They were not willing to go all the way — to pay all the 
price — to suffer all the consequences — but, if you want 
this blessing, I know no other way. I had to come to this 
before I got it. The last idol of my soul had to be re- 
nounced, and it was hard work, as it always is, because we 
love idols. Idols would not be idols if they were not be- 
loved. But we have to lay our real Isaac, our beloved and 
only Isaac, upon the altar. It is hard work, but it has to 
be done, because He is a jealous God. and will have no 
rivals. Do you so appreciate this blessing that you are 
willing to give up your Isaac ? If so, you may have it this 
afternoon. He will fill you with His Spirit. 

Third, and lastly, they waited in obedient faith. How do 
we know ? Because they did o,s He bid them — that is the 
evidence. He said, " Go, tarry in the city of Jerusalem." 
Peter might have said, when he had seen his Lord off to 
Heaven, " Well, what am I going to do now ? I have been 
a long time running after the Lord in Palestine, I must 
betake myself to the fishing. I can wait as well on the sea- 
beach as in Jerusalem. I wonder why the Lord told me to 
go to Jerusalem ? I think it was rather unreasonable. He 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



might have thought of my old father and mother at home. 
I think I shall go back to my fishing-nets." No, no, they 
had been cured of their unbelief by the last few days ex- 
perience. They had learned better than to dictate to their 
Master, and they knew He had a good purpose in sending 
them to Jerusalem, and so they went there and did as He 
bade them — straight back to that upper room they went. 
Mary might have said, " I have been running about minister- 
ing to the Saviour a long time, I'm afraid my friends will think 
I am neglecting home duties and the claims of old friends. 
I really must go home and see to matters a bit : I may as 
well wait there for the Holy Ghost as at Jerusalem." No, 
Mary had learned better. She went back to Jerusalem. 
We have got their names. And they entered into the upper 
room, and shut the door, and waited — obedient faith! 
Some of your poets said — 

" Obedient faith that waits on Thee, 
Thou never wilt reprove.' 9 

No, it is the disobedient faith that is sent empty away. 
Oh ! people are crying out about their faith, but it is their 
disobedient faith. If the Lord has told you to wait in any 
particular place, or way, or company, or time, and you dis- 
obey Him, you will never get it, and you will have to come 
to those conditions at last, even if it is on your dying bed ! 
Obedient faith ! While there is a spark of insubordination, 
or rebellion, or dictation, you will never get it. Truly 
submissive and obedient souls only enter this kingdom. 
Anywhere He tells you to go, anything He tells you to 
sacrifice, or fly from, you will have to do. This is one of 
His choice gifts that He has reserved for His choice ser- 
vants, those who serve Him with all their hearts. Obedient 
faith I 



FILLED WITH THE SPIRIT. 



143 



But you say, "How do you know it was faith? Oh, 
because we know they did as He bade them. Now faith is 
inseparable from expectation. Where there is real faith 
there is always expectation, and when I hear people praying, 
as I often do, from their throats, for the Holy Ghost, and 
see how they talk the minute they get up from their knees, 
and know how they live and whom they associate with, and 
how they spend their time, I say, " Yes, you may pray till 
your dying day, but you will never get it." If they expect- 
ed anything, they would wait for it : common sense tells us 
that. 

Those people waited. How long ? What a hue and cry 
there is now about the Salvation Army people spending whole 
nights in prayer. People — Christians, grey-headed Chris- 
tians, up and down the country — say to me, " I don't know 
how you get the time over. It must be such an immensely 
long time. Do you really mean to say that you spend all 
night in prayer ? 99 I say, " Yes, with just an interval for 
putting the truth and showing the people how to apply it to 
their own consciences." Then they say, " It must seem an 
awfully long time." I suppose it does, to them, to spend 
one whole night in prayer ; but here, we are told, they 
waited ten days, till the Day of Pentecost was fully come. 
I have no doubt they went as far into the night as they 
could keep their natural powers awake. They waited. 
They did not set the Lord a time. They were wiser. They 
did not say, " Now we will go and have a couple of days of 
it. That will be a long time. We will just shut out all 
else and wait on the Lord for a couple of days, and if He 
does not come by that time, it will be outrageous to wait 
beyond it. Whoever heard of a prayer-meeting two days 
and two nights long ? " They did not set the Lord a time. 
They went and waited till it came. 



144 



AGGRESSIVE CHEISTLl^rrr. 



You say, " ISTo ; I have not got it." No ; because you did 
not wait until it came. You got hungry, or you fell asleep, 
or hugged your idol. You did not wait till it came. 

Suppose they had given up on the fifth day and said, 
" There must be some mistake. He knows we are here, all 
ready, and the world is perishing for our message. There 
must be some mistake. We had better begin." But no, 
they waited on, and on, and on, until it came. Can you 
imagine what sort of prayers went up from the upper room ? 
Do you think they were the lazy, lackadaisical prayers that 
we hear every now and then for the Holy Spirit ? 

Oh ! how would Peter agonize and wrestle ! how would 
Thomas plead ! how would Mary weep, beseech and entreat, 
and how were they all of one heart and of one accord. 
They wanted the one thing, and they were there to get it. 
They cared for nothing else but that. They cried for it as 
hungry children cry for bread. They wanted it. Did the 
Lord ever disappoint anybody who waited like that ? Can 
anybody say so here ? Did you ever hear of such a case ? 
Never. He came. 

Oh ! but there are some people, now-a-days, who set God 
times in everything. They think a good deal more about 
their dinners than about Him. They think a great deal 
more about intercourse with their friends and doing the po- 
lite to them, than they do about the precious waiting Holy 
Spirit of God. They think a great deal more about their 
businesses. " Oh ! " they say, " it is business, and business 
must be attended to." But what about the Holy Ghost and 
the Kingdom ? Must not the Kingdom of God be attended 
to ? Must not your soul be saved, and must you not become 
a temple of the indwelling Spirit of God ? Put a must in 
there, if you please. Par more important is the soul than 



Filled with the spirit. 145 

the body. Friends, are these things so, or am I only imag- 
ining them ? Are these great truths, or are they fables ? 
These are the most commonsense, simple exhibitions and 
illustrations of these truths that could possibly be given. 
Was it not so ? Did they not thus wait, and did not the 
Holy Ghost come ? — and when He came He sat upon them 
each. Bless his name ! 

People have a wonderful habit of losing sight of the little 
words of the Bible — the people who make a great to-do 
about the word in other ways, often say, "I never saw that 
till you directed my attention to it." Suppose I were to 
say that this afternoon something happened to each person, 
would you imagine I meant the men and not the women ? 
Of course you would say I meant everyone. And it filled 
them all — the women as well as the men, and they began 
to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utter- 
ance. He came. 

And, my friends, He comes yet. My bodily senses have 
been quite cognizant of His coming sometimes. We only 
know that we feel something that so influences our bodies 
that we cannot describe it. 

In the North, when I was there, we had an all-night of 
prayer, at which one thousand people, admitted by ticket, 
waited all night on God. The meeting began at ten, and 
went on until six in the morning, and there were strong men, 
men in middle life and old men, lying on their faces on the 
floor. There were doctors there, who examined them and 
tried to account for it from physical causes, but they could 
not. It was the power of God. The Holy Ghost does come, 
and because, in coming thus into our souls, and thus filling 
us, He sometimes prostrates our bodies, people rebel, as they 
did on this occasion, and reject the manifestation, and say, 



146 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



"Excitement! fanaticism ! " What right have you to say 
that the Holy Spirit coming into a human soul can operate 
upon that soul to the full extent without, to some degree, 
prostrating the body ? We know how people fall under 
great emotions of anger, grief, and joy. Why? Because 
the influence of the mind has so affected the body that the 
body cannot bear it, and when the Holy Spirit of God 
comes into a human soul and opens its eyes, and quickens 
its perceptions, and enlarges its capacity, and swells it with 
glory, is it an unlikely or improbable thing that the body 
should sometimes be prostrated under His power ? What 
did Paul say ?— " I bear in my body the marks of the Lord 
Jesus, and I have been into the third heaven and heard 
things that it was unlawful (or impossible) to utter." Do 
you think God intended such experiences and visions only 
for Paul and the apostles ? Ah ! there have been many 
since his day who have had such experiences, and many 
more of God's people might have them, if they would, but 
they are not willing to be wrapt in His arms ; they are not 
willing to be pressed to His bosom ; they are not willing to 
know Him in a Scriptural sense ; they are not willing to 
be given up and consumed by His Spirit. Their heart and 
flesh do not cry out after the living God, as David's did. 
They are not panting after Him as the hart after the water- 
brooks. They are not longing to come and appear before 
God. If they were' so longing that they could not live 
without it, then God would come to be revealed to them. 
Will you, then, wait in obedient faith? 

Oh ! I have the most awful realization that you will be 
eternally better or worse for these services, and so I want you 
to come up higher. I don't want you to go back, and get cold 
and indifferent to these things, because here is the hope of 



FILLED WITH THE SPIRIT. 



147 



the world, if there is any hope for it, in people getting filled 
with the Spirit, people getting so woke np to God and His 
glory, and the interests of His kingdom, that they should 
be just as anxious for souls as other people are for sov- 
ereigns. Filled with the Spirit, having eyes to see spiritual 
sights which others do not see, ears to hear the crying of the 
famishing multitudes who are dying for lack of knowledge ; 
hearts to feel so that they could go and weep over them. 
Hands to break the bread of life, and, if need be, a zeal that 
will lead them to die for them. This is what we want, and 
it only comes with the fulness of the Spirit. 

Are you willing, my brother ? Are you willing, my sis- 
ter ? If so, stop with us this afternoon. Never mind the 
dinner ; never mind the tea. You have taken care of the 
outer man long enough, now look after the inner man. 
Never mind the children, mother, just now, the Lord will 
take care of them. Never mind anything, you who are 
athirst, but getting this blessed Holy Spirit of God, this 
full baptism of it on your souls. The Lord help you. 
Amen! 



SERMON IX. 



THE WOELD'S NEED. 

" Son, go work to-day in my vineyard." — Matt. xxi. 28. 

" And the Lord said unto the servant, Go out into the highways and hedges, 
and compel them to come in, that my house may he filled." — Luke xiv. 23. 

We might have enumerated other texts, teaching the same 
truth. There are plenty of them, but the general tenor 
and bearing of the Word of God, especially of the New 
Testament, is more significant than even direct and isolated 
texts. It seems to me that no one can disinterestedly and 
dispassionately study the New Testament without arriving 
at the conclusion that it is a fundamental principle, under- 
lying the whole, that His light and grace is expansive: 
that is, God has, in no case, given His light, His truth, and 
His grace to any individual soul, without holding that soul 
responsible for communicating that light and grace to others. 
Real Christianity is, in its very nature and essence, aggres- 
sive. We get this principle fully exhibited and illustrated 
in the parables of Jesus Christ. If you will study them, 
you will find that He has not given us anything to be used 
merely for ourselves, but that we hold and possess every 
talent which He has committed to us for the good of others, 
and for the salvation of man. If I understand it, I say 
this is a fundamental principle of the New Testament. 

How wonderfully this principle was exhibited in the lives 

148 



THE WORLD'S NEED. 



149 



of the apostles and early Christians ! How utterly careless 
they seemed to be of everything compared with this — this 
was the first thing with them everywhere ! How Paul, at 
the very threshold, counted nothing else of any consequence, 
but willingly, cheerfully gave up every other consideration 
to live for this ; and how he speaks of other apostles and 
helpers in the Gospel who had been nigh unto death, and 
laid down their necks for the work's sake ; and we know 
how he travelled, worked, prayed, wept, and suffered, bled 
and died, for this one end. And so with the early Chris- 
tians, who were scattered through the persecutions, how 
they went everywhere preaching the Word; how earnest 
and zealous they were, even after the apostolic age, we learn 
from ecclesiastical history — how they would push them- 
selves in everywhere; how they made converts, and won 
real, self-denying followers even in kings' courts ; how they 
would not be kept out, and could not be put down, and 
could not be hindered or silenced. " These Christians are 
everywhere," said one of their bitterest persecutors. Yes, 
they were instant in season and out of season ; they won 
men and women on every hand, to the vexation and annoy- 
ance of those who hated them. Like their Master, they 
could not be hid ; they could not be repressed, so aggres- 
sive, so constraining was the spirit which inspired and 
urged them on. 

It becomes a greater puzzle every day to me, coming in 
contact with individual souls, how people read their Bibles ! 
They do not seem to understand what they read. Well 
might a Philip or an angel come to them and say, " Under- 
standest thou what thou readest ? " Oh ! friends, study 
your ISTew Testament on this question, and you will be 
alarmed to find to what an awful extent you are your broth- 



150 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY* 



er's keeper — to what an awful and alarming extent God 
holds yon responsible for the saltation of those around you. 

I want to glance, first, at our call to work for God ; and, 
secondly, at two or three indispensable qualifications for suc- 
cessful labour. 

And, first, as I have just said, we are called by the Word 
not only in these direct passages, but by the underlying 
principle running through it all, and laying upon us the ob- 
ligation to save men. In fact, the world is cast upon us ; we 
are the only people who can save the unconverted. 

Oh ! I wish I could get this thought thoroughly into your 
minds. It has been, perhaps, one of the most potent, with 
respect to any little service I have rendered in the vine- 
yard, — the thought that Jesus Christ has nobody else to 
represent Him here but we Christians ; nobody else to 
work for Him. These poor people of the world, who are in 
darkness and ignorance, have nobody else to show them the 
way of mercy. If we do not go to them with loving earn- 
estness and determination to rescue them from the grasp of 
the great enemy ; if we do not, by the power of the Holy 
Ghost, bind the strong man and take his goods, who is to 
do it ? God has devolved it upon us. I say this is an 
alarming and awful consideration. 

Secondly, we are called by the Spirit. The very first aspi- 
ration, as I said the other night, of a newly-born soul, is after 
some other soul. The very first utterance, after the first- 
burst of praise to God for deliverance from the bondage of 
sin and death, is a prayer gasped to the throne for some other 
soul still in darkness. And is not this the legitimate fruit 
of the Spirit ? Is not this what we should expect ? I take 
any one here, who has been truly saved, to record if the 
first gushings of his soul, after his own deliverance, was not 



THE WORLD'S NEED. 



151 



for somebody else — father, mother, child, brother, sister, 
friend ? 

Oh ! yes, some of you could not go to sleep until you had 
written to a distant relative, and poured out your soul in 
anxious longings for his salvation ; — you could not take your 
necessary food until you had spoken or written to somebody 
in whose soul you were deeply interested. The Spirit began 
at once to urge you to seek for souls ; and so it is frequently 
the last cry of the Spirit in the believer's soul before it 
leaves the body. You have sat beside many a dying saint, 
and what has been the last prayer ? Has it been anything 
about self, money, family, circumstances ? Oh ! those things 
are now all left behind, and the last expressed anxiety has 
been for some prodigal soul outside the kingdom of God. 
When the light of eternity comes streaming upon the soul, 
and its eyes get wide open to the value of souls, it neither 
hears nor sees anything else ! It goes out of time into 
eternity, praying, as the Eedeemer did, for the souls it is 
leaving behind.* This is the first and last utterance of 
the Spirit in the believer's soul on earth ; and oh ! if Chris- 
tians were only true to the promptings of this blessed 
Spirit, it would be the prevailing impulse, the first desire 
and effort all the way through life. It is not God's fault 
that it is not so. In personal dealing with souls no 
point comes out more frequently than this : nothing which 
those who have really been converted and become backslid- 
ers in heart more frequently confess and bemoan than their 
unfaithfulness to the monitions of the Spirit with respect to 
other souls. In fact, backsliding begins here in thousands 
of instances. Satan gets people to yield to considerations 
of ease, propriety, being out of season, being injudicious, and 



•Thus died David Stoner. 



152 



AGGRESSIVE C HIi I STI AN LT Y, 



so on ; and they lose opportunities of dealing with souls, 
and so the Spirit is grieved and grieved. Oh ! what num- 
bers of people have confessed this to me. 

A gentleman, in advanced life, said: "When I was a 
young man, and in my first love, the zeal of the Lord's 
house so consumed me that I used to neglect my daily busi- 
ness, and could scarcely sleep at sight ; but alas ! that was 
many years ago." " Was it not better with you then than 
now?'' I asked; and the tears came welling up into his eyes. 
Oh, yes! the Lord says of him, "I remember thee, the 
kindness of thy youth, the love of thine espousals, when 
thou wentest after me in the wilderness, in a land that was 
not sown ; Israel was holiness unto the Lord, and the first 
fruits of His increase." And, alas ! there are many such 
to-day. They have it all to do over again ; they have to 
repent and do their first works ; they have to come back and 
get forgiven, and washed, and saved, if they are to go into 
the kingdom on high, all for want of systematically and 
resolutely obeying the urgings of the Holy Spirit towards 
their fellowmen. 

Now, you have, some of you, been hearing, the last few 
Sundays, about grieving the Spirit, and about being filled 
with the Spirit ; and some of you are puzzled as to how you 
ought to wait — whether you ought to go on with your law- 
ful avocations and wait. I say : My friends, I could quite 
justify the position I took up last Sunday, but I will not 
stop, for I do not care about circumstantials ; but mind, this 
is the great point — you must so wait, wherever it may be : 
so plead and wrestle, and believe, THAT YOU GET IT. 
Then I care not whether it be in Jerusalem, in the Upper 
Room, or anywhere else — only, get it. Don't let us lose the 
substance in quibbling about the way. Wait in that way 



THE WORLD'S NEED. 



153 



congenial to your present circumstances ; but, oh ! wait for 
it until you get it, for this is the life of your souls, and the 
life of many souls, perchance, besides yours. You want this 
spirit — the spirit that yearns over the souls of your fellow- 
men ; to weep over them as you look at them in their sin, 
and folly, and misery ; the spirit that cannot be satisfied 
with your own enjoyments or with feeling that you are safe, 
or even that your children are safe ; but that yearns over 
every living soul while there is one left unsaved, and can 
never rest satisfied until it is brought into the kingdom. 

Such are the urgings of the Spirit ; and if people would 
only be obedient to them, they would never lose these urg- 
ings. Why, what an anomaly it is ! Does it look reasona- 
ble, or like God's dealings, that people should begin, like the 
old man felt when he was young, and, instead of waxing 
stronger, and having this holy zeal and desire increased, get 
weaker and weaker, and less and less ? Does it look like 
God's way of doing things ? Oh, no ! This eclipse is 
through grieving and quenching the Spirit. 

Now, my friend, you are called by the Spirit to this work. 
Obey the call — do it. Never mind if it chokes you — do 
it. Say, " I had better die in obedience than live in disobe- 
dience." Oh ! these everlasting likes and dislikes. " I can- 
not speak to that person." " I cannot write that letter." 
" Oh ! you don't know what would be the consequences." 
Never mind the consequences — do it. God will stand 
between you and the consequences; and, if He lets you 
suffer, never mind — then suffer ; but obey the voice of the 
Spirit. There would have been thousands of souls saved if 
all those who have had these urgings had obeyed them. 
Pray, where do these urgings come from ? Do they come 
from your own evil hearts ? Then you are better than the 



154 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



Apostle. Separated from the Spirit that dwells in you, and 
disunited from Christ, your living Head, you are selfish, 
devilish. Then where do these urgings come from ? Do 
they come from the devil? Satan, then would indeed be 
divided against himself. Where do they come from ? It 
is the Spirit of the living God that is urging you to come 
out and seek to save the lost. Will you obey these urgings ? 
Will you give up your reasonings ? Will you give up your 
likes and dislikes and obey ? If you will, then He will 
come to you more and more, till, like David, you will feel 
the interests of his kingdom to be more to you than meat 
or drink, than silver or gold. Nay, you will become like 
him who said, "The zeal of Thine house hath eaten me 
up." 

But, further, we are called to this icork by what He has 
done for us. And what is that ? Oh ! you say, I cannot 
tell. No, no ; we shall have to get home first, and then we 
shall never be able to tell. We shall never be able to cast 
up that sum, not even for the gratification of the angels. 
That will remain an unexplored quantity for ever, what He 
has done for us ! ! We shall have to find out what it would 
have been to have been lost ! and what it is to be saved in 
all its fulness and eternity, before we can tell what He has 
done for us ! ! 

What has He done for us ? Oh ! if we had a tithe of the 
love to sinners that He had for us, of His forbearing pa- 
tience, of His persevering effort, when He followed us day 
and night, reasoned and reasoned with us, wooed and al- 
lured us, what could we not do ? 

I remember reading, somewhere, the story of a nobleman * 
who was (I think) a backslider. He was stopping at some 

* Count Zinzendorf . 



THE WORLD'S NEED. 



155 



country inn, and lie went up into a room in which, over the 
mantelpiece, there was a very good picture of the crucifixion 
by a good old master, and under it was written, " I suffered 
this for thee — what hast thou done for me ? " This question 
went home. It struck deep. He thought — Yes, what 
indeed ? He went out into the stables to his horses, to try 
to get rid of the uncomfortable impression, but he could not 
forget it. A soft, pathetic voice seemed to follow him, — 
" I suffered this for thee — what hast thou done forme!" 
At last it broke him down, and he went to his knees. He 
said : " True, Lord, I have never done anything for Thee, 
but now I give myself and my all to Thee, to be used in 
Thy service." 

And have you never heard that voice in your soul, as you 
have been kneeling at the Cross ? Did you ever gaze upon that 
illustrious Sufferer, and hear His voice, as you looked back 
into the paltry past ? What hast Thou done for me ? 

Now, there have been, at least, something like 350 people, 
who have come forward, so far, in these services, professing 
to give themselves afresh and fully to Jesus. I am sure, in 
the main, they have been sincere. They have come for the 
witness of the Spirit to their adoption, and for power for 
service. Now, friends, I want to know what this is to come 
to — what is to be the end of it ? 

" What are you going to do, brother ? 
What are you going to do ? " 

And sister, too. Is it going to die out in sentiment ? Is it 
going to evaporate in sighs and wishings, and end in 
" I cannot"? God forbid! What are you going to do? 
What have you been doing for Him the last week ? Ask 
yourselves. You say — "Well, I have read my Bible more." 



156 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



Very good, so far as it goes. What have you read it for ? 
"Well," you say, "to get to know the Lord's will and to get 
instruction and comfort." Aye, exactly, but that is all for 
yourself, you see. "I have prayed a great deal." Very 
good. I wish everybody would pray. The apostles say all 
men everywhere ought to pray. "I have been asking the 
Lord for great things." Very good, praise the Lord; but 
those are for yourself, mainly. If you have been led 
out in agonizing supplication for souls, thank God for it, and 
go on, and, as the Apostle says, "Labour thereunto, with all 
perseverance, praying in the Holy Ghost;" but if it has been 
merely to get all you can for yourself, what profit is that to 
the Lord ? But you say — "I am bringing up my family." 
Exactly ; so are the worldly people around you, but what 
for ? For God or for yourself ? Oh ! let us look at these 
things, friends. I am afraid a great deal of religion is a 
mere transition of the selfishness of the human heart from 
the world to religion. I am afraid a great deal of the 
religion of this day ends in getting all you can and doing as 
little as you can — like some of your servants. You know 
the sort, who will do no more than they are forced — just 
get through, because they are hired. There is a great deal 
of that kind of service in these days, both towards man and 
towards God ! 

Now, friends, what have you been doing for Him — for 
the promotion of His blessed, glorious, saving purposes in 
the world ? What have you been denying yourself for the 
sake of His kingdom ? What labor have you gone through 
of mind, or brain, or heart ? How many letters have you 
written ? How many people have you spoken to ? How 
many visits have you made ? What self-denying labor have 
you been doing for Him who has done (as you say) so much 



THE WORLD'S NEED. 



157 



for you ? What have you been suffering for Him ? Have 
you been trying, in some little measure, to fill up behind 
the measure of His sufferings " for His body's sake, the 
church ? *' Have you been carrying the sins and sorrows of 
a guilty world on your heart before God, and pleading with 
Him for His own Name's sake, to pour out His Spirit upon 
the ungodly multitudes outside, and to quicken half-asleep 
professors inside ? Have you been subjecting yourself to 
reproach and contempt — not only from the world, but 
from half-hearted professors and Pharisees, bearing the 
Cross, enduring the shame of unkind reproaches in living 
and striving to save them ? Oh, what have you been doing, 
brother and sister ? 

Come, now, friends, I want a practical result. He 
suffered that for you. He is up yonder, interceding for 
you. Five bleeding wounds He always bears in the pres- 
ence of His Father for you. If He were to forget you for a 
single moment, or cease His intercession, what would 
happen ? What are you doing for Him ? He has left you 
an example that you should follow in His steps. What 
were they? They were blood-tracked; they were humble 
steps. They were steps scorned by the world. He was 
ignored, and traduced, and rejected of men. He had not 
where to lay His head. He carried in His body and in His 
soul the sorrows and sufferings of all our race. He was a 
man of sorrows — not His own. He had no reason to be 
sorrowful. He was the Father's own beloved, and He knew 
it, but He was a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief. 
The griefs of this poor, lost, half-damned world He bore, 
<%nd they were sometimes so intolerable that they squeezed 
the blood through His veins. Have you been following in 
His footsteps, in any measure ? He lived not for Himself. 



158 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



He came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and 
took upon Him the form of a servant. What are you doing ? 
Oh ! my friends, up, up, and be doing. Begin, if you have 
not begun — begin to-day. Ask Him to baptize you with 
His Spirit, and let you begin at once to follow Him in the 
regeneration of the Spirit. You are called by what He did 
for you ! 

Then, you are called by the wants of the world. I have 
said so much about this at other times that I will not say 
more now, only methinks it is a theme that is never ex- 
hausted, and never will be while there are any more sinners 
to save. Oh! the wants of the world! To me it is an 
overwhelming, a prodigious thought, that He shed His 
blood for every soul of man, and that as He hung there, He 
saw, under all the vileness, and sin, and ruin of the Fall — 
the human soul created originally in His own image, and 
capable of infinite and eternal development and progress. 
The soul to be rescued, washed, redeemed, saved, sanctified, 
and glorified — He saw this glorious jewel and He gave 
Himself for it. Look at these souls. There is not one of 
them so mean, or vile, or base, but can be rescued by the 
power of His Spirit, and by His living, glorious Gospel 
brought to bear upon them. The Saviour, quoting from the 
Prophets, says, "Ye are gods (and adds) the Scriptures 
cannot be broken." He had no such little, mean, insignifi- 
cant estimate of the worth of human souls as some people 
have now-a-days, who consign whole generations to hell 
without any bowels of mercy or compassion. Oh! the 
Lord fill us with the pity of Jesus Christ, who, when He 
saw the multitudes, wept over them. 

Oh ! friends, think of one such soul ! What is your gold, 
or houses, or lands — what your respectability, what your 



THE WORLD'S NEED. 



159 



reputation, what all the prizes of this world? We talk 
about it, but who realizes it — who, who ? — the value of one 
precious, immortal soul saved, redeemed, sanctified. Oh, 
the wants of the world ! They are dying, they are dying ! ! 
When people come to me with their fastidious objections, I 
say — "My friend, all I know is — souls are dying, dying." 

If your homes were being decimated by the cholera, you 
would not be very particular about the means you used to 
stay it, and if anybody came with objections to the rough- 
ness of your measures, you would say, " the people are dying, 
they are dying," and that would be the end of all argument. 
i say, they are dying, and they are to be saved. Satan is 
getting them : I want God to have them. J esus Christ has 
bought them. He was the propitiation for the sins of the 
whole world. They belong to Him, and He shall have every- 
one I can reach, and everyone I can inspire others to reach 
also. 

The world is dying. Do you believe it ? You are called 
by the wants of the world. Begin nearest home if you like, 
by all means : I have little faith in those people's ministra- 
tions who go abroad after others, while their own are perish- 
ing at their firesides. Begin at home but do not end there. 
" Oh ! yes," people say, " begin at home," but they end there ; 
you never hear of them anywhere else, and it comes to very 
little what they do at home, after all. God has ordained 
that the two shall go together. Get them saved by all means, 
but somebody else saved as well. Set yourself to work for 
God. Go to Him to ask Him how to do it. Go to Him for the 
equipment of power, and then begin. Never mind how you 
tremble. I dare say your trembling will do more good than 
if you were ever so brave. Never mind the tears. I wish 
Christians would weep the Gospel into people ; it would often 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



go deeper than it does. Never mind if you do stammer. 
They will believe you when it comes from the heart. They 
will say, " He talked to me quite natural/' as a man said, 
some time ago — wondering that he should be talked to 
about religion in a natural way ; but mind, no mock feeling, 
for they will detect it in a minute. Go to the closet until 
you get filled with the Spirit, and then go and let it out 
upon them. Finney says, " I went and let my heart out on the 
people." Get your heart full of the living water and then 
open the gates and let it flow out. Look them in the face 
and take hold of them lovingly by the hand and say, "My 
friend, you are going to everlasting death. If nobody has 
ever told you till now — I have come to tell you. My friend, 
you have a precious soul. Is it saved ? " They can under- 
stand that ! not beginning in a roundabout way, but talking 
to them straight : — " Do you ever think about your precious 
soul? Is it saved? Are your sins pardoned? Are you 
ready to die ? M Your rich neighbors and your servant girls 
and your stable-men alike, can understand that. 

A lady said to my daughter, " I have begun talking to peo- 
ple about their souls in quite a different way to what I used. 
I begin asking them if they do not know they are sinners 
and if ready to die, and it produces quite a different effect." 
For one reason, she has her own heart full of the love and 
Spirit of God, and that burns her words in. Begin in that 
way and see what God will do through you, for, of course, 
I only recognise you as the instrumentality which He has 
chosen, and those who reflect' upon the instrumentality, re- 
' fleet upon His wisdom. You go and put your hand to the 
plough and He will give you strength to push it along. 

The Lord help you to go home thinking about the wants 
of the world, and the next Sabbath we will consider the 
qualifications for labour. 



SERMON X. 



THE HOLY GHOST. 

" And, behold, I send the promise of my Father upon you : but tarry ye in the 
city of Jerusalem, until ye be endued with power from on high."— Luke 
xxiv. 49. 

"But ye shall receive power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you." — 
Acts i. 8. 

Friends who were present at former services will remem- 
ber our line of thought, without my stopping to recapitulate. 
My chief reason for taking up this subject again, after having 
preached four sermons on it, is to meet the difficulties of some 
whom I believe to be anxious and honest enquirers. Taking 
those who have written and spoken to me as representatives 
of a class, it occurred to me that there might be many 
others in a similar state of mind, and it is a great joy to me 
if the Lord uses me to meet real difficulties, and to help 
those who are exercised by them into a higher state of grace, 
and a more thorough and complete devotion to the Lord. 
This is my end. God is my witness in every service. 

Now, I do not want to make any reflections, and will not 
do so any further than I can help ; but in dealing with such 
a subject we cannot avoid this, to a certain extent, as I have 
said before ; if the truth reveals error, and if trying to get 
into a better track necessarily in some measure reflects on the 
old track — we cannot help it, and we must not eschew the 
former for the latter. It must be manifest, I think, to every 

161 



162 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



spiritual and thoughtful Christian that there is a great want 
somewhere in connection with the preaching of the Gospel, 
and the instrumentalities of the church at large. That there 
are many blessed exceptions I joyfully and gladly admit. 
No one hails them with greater gladness than I do. That 
there are blessed green spots here and there in the wilder- 
ness is quite true, and when these are gathered together and 
descanted on in articles, they look very nice, and we are apt 
to take the flattering unction to our souls that things are not 
so bad after all ; but, when we come to travel the country 
over and find how few and far between these green spots are, 
and hear what a tide of lamentation and mourning reaches 
us all round the land as to the deadness, coldness, and 
dearth of Christian churches, we cannot help feeling that 
there is a great want somewhere ! This is not only my 
opinion but it is almost universally admitted, that, with the 
enormous expenditure of means, the great amount of human 
effort, the multiplication of instrumentalities during the past 
century, there has not been a corresponding result. 

People say to me, on every hand, we have meetings with- 
out number, services, societies, conventions, conferences, but 
what comes of them all, comparatively ? And I may just 
say here that numbers of ministers and clergymen, in private 
conversation, admit the same thing. In fact, none are more 
ready to admit this comparative lack of results than many 
dear spiritual ministers. They say, when talking with us 
behind the scenes — " Yes, it is a sad fact. I think I preach 
the truth. I pray about it. I am anxious for results, but 
alas ! alas ! the conversions are but few and far between." 
And then, not only are those conversions few, but in the 
mass of instances superficial — we should expect from such 
a putting of the truth as that we have been reading about, 



THE HOLY GHOST. 



163 



numerous and continual turnings to the Lord as in those days 
— we should expect men coming out openly from sin and 
from God-dishonoring courses, businesses, and professions 
— coming out from fashionable and worldly circles, abjuring 
the world, and literally and absolutely following Christ as in 
those days. That is what we have a right to expect, and 
yet how comparatively rare they are, so that when people do 
this, there is quite a commotion, and it is talked about all 
over the land. This, I say, is universally admitted, and it 
behooves us to ask before God, and with an earnest heart, 
yearning, desiring to improve this state of things — where 
is the lack, what is the want ? 

Note, secondly, this want is not the truth. Oh ! what a 
great deal of talk we have about the truth, and not any too 
much. I would not yield to any man or woman in my love 
for this Bible. I love this Word and regard it as the stand- 
ard of all faith and practice, and our guide to live by ; but 
it is not enough of itself. The great want is not the truth, 
for you see facts would contradict this theory. If it were 
the truth, then there would be no lack at this day, compared 
with other times, because we never had so much of the truth. 
There never was so much preaching of the truth, or such a 
wide dissemination of the Word of God, yet, comparatively, 
where are the results ? — Further, not only as to quantity, 
but as to quality, am I discouraged. Not only are there com- 
paratively few conversions, but a great many of these are of 
a questionable kind: We should not only ask — are people 
converted, but what are they converted to ? What sort of 
saints are they ? because, I contend, you had far better let 
a man alone in sin than give him a sham conversion, and 
make him believe he is a Christian when he is nothing of the 
kind. So you see we must look after the quality as well as 



164 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIAXITY, 



the quantity, and I fear, we have an awful amount of spuri- 
ous production, and it behooves us — and I will for one, if I 
were to be crucified for it to-morrow — be true to what the 
Spirit of God has taught me on this point, I will never pan- 
der to things as they are for fear of the persecution which 
follows trying to put them right. God forbid ! 

Then, I say, the lack is not truth. There will be thousands 
of sermons preached to-day — the truth, and nothing but the 
truth. Nobody will pretend to say they were not in perfect 
keeping with the Word of God ; and yet they will be perfect 
failures, and nobody will know it better than they who preach 
them ! These are facts. 

I was talking, on this point, awhile ago, with a good man, 
who said, " Ah ! yes, I have not seen a conversion in my 
church for these two years." Now, what was the reason ? 
There was a reason, and I am afraid many might say the 
same. Yet there are the unconverted. They come to be 
operated upon. Take a church where there is a congregation 
of, say 800 or 1,000, suppose with a membership of 200 or 
300. What becomes of the 500 or 700 unbelievers, who come 
and go, Sunday after Sunday, like a door on its hinges, nei- 
ther better nor worse ? — nay, God grant it might be so, but 
they are worse. They get enough light to light them down to 
damnation, but they do not get enough power to lift them 
into salvation. What is the matter? There must be 
something wrong. Will you account for it. It ought to be 
accounted for ! It ought not so to be. God is not changed. 
Surely He is as anxious for the salvation of men now as He 
ever was. Human hearts are not changed ; they are neither 
better nor worse; they are depraved, vile, devilish — just 
the same. The Gospel is just the same power it ever was, 
rightly experienced, lived, and preached. It is still the 



THE HOLY GHOST. 



165 



power of God unto salvation. Then what is the matter ? 
The truth is preached. The people hear it, and yet they 
remain as they were. Where is the lack ? 

Now, I say, and I most unhesitatingly assert, that the great 
want is power — this power of which we have been reading. 
And I want to remark, thirdly, that this power is as distinct, 
and definite, and a separate gift of God as was this Book, as 
was the Son, or any other gift which He has given us ! 

It is distinctly recognized, not only in our texts, but, as we 
read to you again and again, as a distinct and definite gift 
accompanying the efforts of those who live on the conditions 
on which God can give it to them. We cannot explain this 
gift, but it is the power of the Holy Spirit of God in the soul 
of the speaker accompanying His word, making it cut and 
pierce to the dividing asunder soul and spirit. "Ye shall 
receive power after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you." 

"Ye shall be endued with," — not the truth, not faith 
(they had faith before that), but, " Ye shall be endued with 
power, and, as He says in another place, "which all your ad- 
versaries shall not be able to gainsay or resist." Though 
they may stone you, as they did Stephen, they shall be cut 
in their hearts, and made to feel the power of your testi- 
mony. 

Now, I find people who go to work, which is all right, be- 
cause the power comes to us in obedient faith ; but they go 
trusting in their own efforts. They are without this endow- 
ment of power, and they see no result. The work is a com- 
parative failure. Oh ! what numbers of people have come to 
me who have been at work in different directions, in 
churches, as ministers, elders, deacons, leaders, Sabbath 
school teachers, tract distributors, and the like, confessing 
that they had been working for more or less lengthened 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



periods, and had seen comparatively little result. They say, 
" Do you think this is right ? Do you think I ought to go 
on ? " Go on, assuredly, but not in the same track. Go on, 
most decidedly, but seek a fresh inspiration. There is some- 
thing wrong, or you would have seen some fruit of your 
labour — not all the fruit. God does not give to any of us to 
see it all ; but we do see enough to assure us that the Holy 
Ghost is accompanying our testimony. God's people have 
always done that when they have worked in conformity 
with the conditions on which the power can be given. 

Now, this is how I account for the want of results — the 
want of the direct, pungent, enlightening, convicting, restor- 
ing, transforming power of the Holy Ghost ; and I care not 
how gigantic the intellect of the agent, or how equipped 
from the school of human learning, I would rather have a 
little child, with the power of the Holy Ghost, hardly able 
to put two sentences of the Queen's English together, to 
come to help, bless, and benefit my soul, than I would have 
the most learned divine in the kingdom without it, for " it is 
not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit." Oh ! that 
you would learn it. When you have learnt that, you will 
be made ; when you experience it, you will lay hold on God. 
It is not by might — might of intellect, or learning, or elo- 
quence, or position, or influence ; it is not by might, nor by 
power — man's power — of any sort, but by My Spirit. That 
is as true as it ever was. Here is the secret of the 
Church's failure ! She is like Israel of old : " She hath 
multiplied her defenced cities and her palaces, but she hath 
forgotton the God of Israel, in whom her strength is." If 
you will read the history of the church from the beginning, 
you will find it is true what I say, that just to the degree 
that the church has increased in the material, she has de- 



THE HOLY GHOST. 



167 



creased in the spiritual. I do not say it ought to be so ; I do 
not say that is a necessity. I only give you a significant 
fact that it has been so. 

You say — "How do you account for it ? " I account for 
it because we poor, wretched, tiny, helpless creatures, can- 
not get anything good in the creature, but we begin to trust 
in it. But when God teaches us that we have nothing to 
trust in, when He makes us realize our own nothingness and 
utter helplessness, and gives us hold of Him with the grasp 
of despair, then we will begin to be of some use — and never 
till then. It is God that worketh in us and by us. The 
Apostle labours all the way through to show and convince 
everybody that it was God in him and not of himself at all. 
Though he could have preached with enticing words of 
man's wisdom, and, no doubt, had many a temptation to do 
it, as everybody has who has dipped into the flowery paths 
of human rhetoric and learning, but he eschewed this as he 
would the devil. He said, " no — this one thing I do " — put- 
ting aside absolutely all else, he went on straight to that 
work till they cut his head off. 

I believe you do perceive, but, if you do not, take the Book 
and examine it yourself, — be at the trouble, — you will not 
get at the mind of the Lord without a great deal of trouble 
on these matters of power, spiritual union, and the like. 
Take the Bible with you on your knees before the Lord ; show 
Him the words, and say, " Now, Lord, show me the meaning 
of this." Wait, and there will come a voice from the excel- 
lent glory. There will come as light from the Shekinah, 
which will reveal it in your spiritual consciousness, and you 
will thus know that thing forever. You will be wiser than 
your teachers with respect to that particular point. 

Further, you say, " Can we have this power equally with 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



the early disciples ? n I say, reasoning by analogy, assum- 
ing that what God has done in the past He will continue to 
do in the future, is it not likely that He will give it to us, 
because we equally need it ? — we poor things, in our day, 
as. they did in theirs, we equally need it : first, because the 
character of the agents is the same. TVe are very much like 
them, and they were very much like us. This has often en- 
couraged me. If they had been men of gigantic intellects 
and extraordinary education, training, and position ; if they 
had possessed all human equipment and qualifications, we 
might have looked back through the ages in despair, and said, 
"I can never be such as they were." Look what they were, 
naturally, apart from this gift of power. The Holy Ghost 
has taken care to give us their true characters. They were 
men of like passions, weaknesses, tendencies, liability to fall, 
with ourselves — just such poor, frail, weak, easily-tripped- 
up creatures, and, in many instances, unbelieving and diso- 
bedient, before Pentecost. Xow, I say this is encouraging 
for us all. 

You remember what Jesus said to ^lary — < ; Go and tell 
my disciples and Peter." Mary, perhaps, would have left 
Peter out after his shameful denial of the Lord ; for fear of 
this, Jesus said, " Go and tell my disciples and Peter." 

Ah ! there are some here saying, " But Peter was not so 
bad as I am." 'Well, we don't know anything about that, but, 
whether you are worse or not, the Holy Ghost is equal to the 
emergency. He can cure you. He can baptize you with His 
power. You may have denied Him, if not as Peter did, yet 
practically as bad. It makes no difference to God whether 
you have been a little bad or very bad ; whether you have 
denied Him once or thrice, or whether you have denied Him 
with oaths and curses. If you will only come, and comply 



THE HOLT GHOST. 



169 



with the conditions, He will look on you, heal you, and bap- 
tize you with power. Did they not all forsake Him and 
flee, except a few poor faithful women ? All the world for- 
sook Him and fled in the hour of His extremity. " Ah ! " 
you say, <( well, I have done the same myself. I would not 
watch with Him one hour. I have betrayed Him before my 
friends and acquaintances in the world, where I have been 
brought into circumstances that have tested my fidelity. My 
courage has failed, and I have failed to witness for Him." 
Yes, I know and agree with you that it was base ingratitude. 
You were a traitor, indeed ; but still, if you will come back, 
"Peter," and repent, and do your first works, He will receive 
you — baptize you with power. Oh ! what they were before 
Pentecost, and what they were after! Poor Peter, who 
could not stand the questionings of a servant maid, who 
could not dare to have it said that he was one of the des- 
pised Nazarenes, what a valiant soldier he afterwards be- 
came for the Lord Jesus Christ, and how tradition says he 
was crucified for his Master at the last. Anyway, we know 
he was a faithful and valiant soldier to the end of his jour- 
ney. 

Now, this baptism will transform you as it did them; it 
will make you all prophets and prophetesses, according to 
your measure. 

Will you come and let Him baptize you ? Will you learn, 
once and forever, that it is not a question of human merit, 
strength, or deserving, at all, but simply a question of sub- 
mission, obedience, faith. 

Then we need it because not only are the agents the same, 
but our work is essentially the same. 

It may differ in its outward manifestations because we live 
in an age of greater toleration, but it is just the same in es- 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



sence, and I do not know, as to the manifestation, when you 
come to do it in apostolic fashion, with apostolic spirit, 
whether you do not get very much the same apostolic treat- 
ment. They gnash upon you with their teeth, and do as 
much as the law will let them, and sometimes a little more, 
in the way of stoning and persecuting you. 

The great thing to be done by this power of God is to sub- 
due the naturally evil, wicked, and rebellious heart of man. 
Now God alone is able to do that. That is a superhuman 
work. You may enlighten a man's intellect, civilize his 
manners, reform his habits, make him a respectable, honest, 
industrious member of society, without the power of God, 
but you cannot transform his soul. That is too much for 
any human reformer. That is the prerogative of the Holy 
Ghost, and I have not a shadow of a doubt that the eternal 
day will reveal every other kind of work to be wood, hay, 
stubble. All the sham conversions, all the people whose lives 
and opinions have been changed by anything short of this 
power, will be wood, hay, stubble. It is the prerogative of the 
Spirit of God. Therefore, God never pretends to do it by 
any other means ; and all through the Bible this power is as- 
cribed to the Spirit of God. Therefore, we want this Spirit 
to do this work. What ! you set yourself to enlighten a dark- 
ened human soul, to convince a hardened, rebellious sinner, to 
convert a rebel in arms against God, with an inveterate hatred 
in the very core of his soul against God and all about God ! 
You set yourself to bring down that — to transform that evi], 
wicked heart, to subdue that soul to submission and obedi- 
ence! — you try it, try it without the Spirit of God! Oh! 
no, you want that Spirit. You want the same measure of 
that Spirit, just the same, which Paul had. 

And what is our work? To go and subjugate the world 



THE HOLY GHOST. 



171 



to Jesus ; everybody we can reach, everybody we can influ- 
ence, and bring them to the feet of J esus, and make them re- 
alize that He is their lawful King and lawgiver ; that the 
Devil is a usurper, and that they are to come and serve Christ 
all the days of their lives. Dare any of us think of it without 
this equipment of power ? Talk about " Can we have it ? " 
— we are of no use without it. What can we do without it ? 
This is the reason of the effeteness of so much professed 
Christianity ; there is no Holy Ghost in it. It is all rotten. 
It is like a very pretty corpse — you cannot say there is this 
wanting or the other wanting, it is a perfect form, but dead. 
It is like a good galvanic battery. It is all right — perfect 
in all its parts — but when you touch it there is no effect — 
there is no fire or shock. What is the matter ? It only 
wants the fire — the power. 

Oh ! friends, we want the power that we may be able to 
go and stretch ourselves upon the dead in trespasses and sins, 
and breathe into him the breath of spiritual life. We want 
to be able to go and touch his eyes that he may see, and speak 
to the dead and deaf with the voice of God and make them 
hear. This is what we want — power. 

If we equally need it, is it likely that God will withhold 
it? The Book, rightly read and understood, is full of prom- 
ise and exhortation to get it. Is it likely that if we are as frail 
as they were, if the work is the same, is it likely that the 
God of all grace, and our Father as much as theirs, and as 
much in sympathy with the souls of men, will withhold it 
from us ? No, no. But our Saviour distinctly told us that 
He bought it for us — that it was more expedient that His 
people should have it than that He should remain with 
them. It is promised to all believers to the end of time. 
The conditions you know — simply putting away everything 



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AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



that hinders, casting aside every doubtful thing, trampling 
it in the dust ; then a full, whole-hearted surrender to Him, 
embracing the Cross, embracing His will at all costs and 
sacrifices, and then a determined march to the upper room 
at Jerusalem and a determined abiding there until you get 
it — these are the conditions. Anybody can have it on 
these terms. 

Then, in conclusion, let me remind you — and it makes my 
own soul almost reel when I think of it — that God holds 
us responsible. He holds you responsible for all the good 
you might do if you had it. Do not deceive yourself. He 
will have the five talents with their increase. He will not 
have an excuse for one, and you will not dare to go up to the 
throne and say, " Thou wast a hard master, reaping where 
Thou dost not sow, and gathering where Thou hadst not 
strewn. Thou biddest me to save souls when Thou knewest 
I had not the power." What will He say to you ? " Wick- 
ed and slothful servant, out of thine own mouth will I judge 
thee. You knew where you could have got the power. 
You knew the conditions. You might have had it. Where 
are the souls you might have saved. Where are the chil- 
dren that I would have given you ? Where is the fruit ? " 
Oh! friends, these are solemn and awful realities. Oh, 
what you might do ! Who can tell ? Who would ever have 
thought, twenty years ago, when I first raised my voice, a 
feeble, trembling woman, one of the most timid and bashful 
the Lord ever saved, the hundreds of precious souls that 
would be given me ! I only refer to myself because I know 
my own case better than that of another ; but, let me ask 
you — supposing I had held back and been disobedient to 
the Heavenly vision, what would God have said to me for 
the loss of all this fruit ? Thank God, much of it is al- 



THE HOLY GHOST. 



173 



ready gathered into Heaven, people who have sent me word 
from their dying beds, that they blessed God they had ever 
heard my voice, saying that they should wait for me on the 
other side, prepared to lead me to the throne — what would 
have become of the fruit ? / should not have had it any- 
way. They would never have become my crown of rejoic- 
ing in the day of the Lord. Oh, who can tell what God 
can do by any man or woman, however timid, however 
faint, if only fully given up to Him. My brother, my sis- 
ter, He holds you responsible. He holds you responsible, 
my sister — you, who wrote me about your difficulties and 
temptations in testifying of Jesus — He holds you respon- 
sible. What are you going to do ? Ask yourself. It is 
coming. You believe it ! You say you do. Unless you 
are a confirmed hypocrite, you do — that you are going to 
stand before the throne of His glory. You believe that 
you are going to stand before Him by-and-bye, when you 
shall receive according to the things you have done in your 
body. What shall you say ? The world is dying — souls 
are being damned at an awful rate every day. Men are 
running to destruction. Torrents of iniquity are rolling 
down our streets and through our world. God is almost 
tired of the cry of our sins and iniquities going up into His 
ears. What are you going to do, brother ? What are you 
going to do ? Will you set to work ? Will you get this 
power ? Will you put away everything that hinders ? 
Will you have it at all costs ? 

We had a letter very recently, about a gentleman who had 
been reconverted in the services of the Salvation Army, tell- 
ing us that he has relinquished an income of £800 a year, 
in order to keep a conscience void of offence — this is 
the result of the power of the Holy Ghost. I heard 



174 



AGGRESSIVE CHRISTIANITY. 



of another gentleman who was invited to a party. After 
dinner, the card-table was got out, as usual, and when the 
cards were all spread and everybody was ready to begin, this 
gentleman jumped up, and pushed it away, and said, "I have 
done with this for ever." The lady who told me said, "He 
was down on his knees before we had time to turn round, 
and was praying for us and for all the house. Oh!" 
she added, "you should have seen them." Yes, of course, 
every man felt like the people round the Saviour. Every 
man's own conscience condemned him. " They went off home, 
without any more card-playing, or dancing, or wine-drinking 
that night." Come out from amongst the ungodly. Testify 
against them. Reprove them. Entreat them with tears ; 
but be determined to deliver your soul of their blood. God 
will give you the power, and He holds you responsible for 
doing this. You have received the light. Will you do it ? 
If you will, we shall meet again, and rejoice with joy un- 
speakable. If you do, we shall praise God for ever that He 
brought us inside the walls of this building long after it has 
smouldered into dust. There shall be children and grand- 
children, and great grandchildren from you spiritually, if 
you will only be faithful. 



